Texas Rent Affordability
Median rent $1,438/mo. 30% rule needs $57,520/yr income. Rent = 23% of Texas median household income.
Max affordable rent by income
| Gross income | Max rent (30%) | Max rent (25% conservative) | vs Texas median |
|---|---|---|---|
| $30,000 | $750/mo | $625/mo | 52% of median |
| $40,000 | $1000/mo | $833/mo | 70% of median |
| $50,000 | $1250/mo | $1042/mo | 87% of median |
| $60,000 | $1500/mo | $1250/mo | 1.04× median |
| $75,000 | $1875/mo | $1563/mo | 1.30× median |
| $100,000 | $2500/mo | $2083/mo | 1.74× median |
| $125,000 | $3125/mo | $2604/mo | 2.17× median |
| $150,000 | $3750/mo | $3125/mo | 2.61× median |
| $200,000 | $5000/mo | $4167/mo | 3.48× median |
Rent vs buy break-even in Texas
The annual rent-to-home-price ratio of 6.2% is above 5%, often favoring buying over renting in Texas. Rent is high enough that mortgage payments on the median home may be comparable. Run a full break-even with current rates, property tax, and HOA.
Price-to-rent ratio is a heuristic. Full break-even depends on mortgage rate, property tax, maintenance, HOA, transaction costs, and the buyer's expected hold period.
Rent in neighboring states
How Texas rent compares to contiguous neighbors. Relocation, remote-work geography, or commute-belt decisions.
| State | Median rent | % of state HH median | Median home | vs TX |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Texas (current) | $1,438 | 23% | $280,200 | — |
| Arkansas | $942 | 19% | $178,100 | -$496 |
| Oklahoma | $1,004 | 19% | $184,800 | -$434 |
| Louisiana | $1,078 | 21% | $207,500 | -$360 |
| New Mexico | $1,124 | 22% | $243,100 | -$314 |
Other states
Common questions
- What is the median rent in Texas?
- Texas statewide median gross monthly rent is $1,438 (Census ACS 2023 B25064). Metro areas typically run 20-50% above the state median; rural areas 10-25% below. Numbers reflect all renters and bedroom counts combined.
- How much income do I need to afford the median rent in Texas?
- Using the 30% rule (rent ≤ 30% of gross income), you need about $57,520/year. The 25% conservative rule pushes that to $69,024/year. Texas median household income is $76,292 — rent eats 23% of typical earners' income.
- Is renting or buying a better deal in Texas?
- Rule of thumb: if annual rent < 5% of home price, renting wins. Texas ratio: annual rent $17,256 / median home $280,200 = 6.2%. Buying may be favored (rents are high relative to home prices). Full break-even depends on time horizon, mortgage rate, property tax, and HOA.
- Why is rent so much higher in some Texas metros than the statewide median?
- State median averages across rural and urban renters. A high-cost metro (LA, NYC, SF, Boston, Seattle, DC) drives metro rent 30-60% above the state number. Use the statewide median for relocation comparison, but expect to pay above-median in any large city.
Full data sources and formulas: /sources.
Estimate only — not financial advice. The 30% rule is a guideline, not a rule. State median hides large city-level variation. Calculate take-home pay in Texas →
Sources
Last reviewed: · Beforeview Editorial · editorial policy