Can You Afford a House in Dublin on One Income?
Dublin's median house price is €495,000. The maximum a single earner on €60,000 can borrow is €240,000. That's a €255,000 gap. So is it impossible? Not quite — but you need to be strategic. Here's the honest picture.
The Brutal Maths
Let's start with what the Central Bank rules actually allow for a single buyer:
| Your Salary | Max Mortgage (4×) | 10% Deposit | Max Property Price | Gap to Dublin Median |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| €40,000 | €160,000 | €17,778 | €177,778 | −€317,222 |
| €50,000 | €200,000 | €22,222 | €222,222 | −€272,778 |
| €60,000 | €240,000 | €26,667 | €266,667 | −€228,333 |
| €70,000 | €280,000 | €31,111 | €311,111 | −€183,889 |
| €80,000 | €320,000 | €35,556 | €355,556 | −€139,444 |
| €100,000 | €400,000 | €44,444 | €444,444 | −€50,556 |
| €125,000 | €500,000 | €55,556 | €555,556 | +€60,556 |
Strategy 1: Buy a New Build and Stack HTB + FHS
This is the most powerful route for single buyers in Dublin. Here's a worked example for someone earning €65,000:
| Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Your mortgage (4× €65k) | €260,000 |
| Your deposit (savings) | €30,000 |
| Help to Buy refund (up to 10%) | €25,000 |
| First Home Scheme equity share | €85,000 (20%) |
| Total buying power | €400,000 |
From €266,667 max to €400,000 buying power — that's a €133,333 boost. At €400k, you can access new build 1-2 bed apartments in Dublin, and 2-bed apartments or terraced houses in commuter areas like Kildare, Meath, and north Wicklow.
The trade-off: the government holds a 20% equity share in your home through FHS. You'll buy this back over time, and the cost depends on how much property values move. Our guide on stacking HTB + FHS explains the long-term implications.
Strategy 2: The Local Authority Home Loan
If you've been turned down by two mainstream lenders, the Local Authority Home Loan offers a government-backed mortgage at competitive fixed rates (currently 3.35%–3.85% depending on term). The income limit for single applicants was historically €70,000 but is under review in 2026 with proposed increases.
LAHL has property price limits — in Dublin, the current cap is €415,000. Combined with the HTB scheme, a single earner on €65k with €30k savings could stretch to a €360k property through LAHL.
Strategy 3: Look Beyond Dublin (But Stay Connected)
A single earner on €60k (max property ~€267k) is priced out of Dublin's median market. But step 30-40 minutes on the train and the picture changes dramatically:
| Area | Median Price | Commute to Dublin | Affordable on €60k? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Drogheda, Co. Louth | €290,000 | 50 min train | With HTB yes |
| Naas / Newbridge, Co. Kildare | €310,000 | 40 min train | With HTB + FHS |
| Navan, Co. Meath | €285,000 | 50 min bus/car | With HTB yes |
| Arklow, Co. Wicklow | €275,000 | 70 min train | With HTB yes |
| Portlaoise, Co. Laois | €220,000 | 55 min train | Yes, without supports |
| Carlow Town | €215,000 | 60 min train | Yes, without supports |
If remote or hybrid work is an option, the commuter belt opens up significantly. Check our county property guides for median prices in every county.
Strategy 4: Buy With a Larger Deposit
The 4× income rule caps your mortgage, not your property price. If you have access to a larger deposit — through years of savings, a family gift, an inheritance, or a combination — you can buy a more expensive property even on a modest income.
For example, on a €60k salary with €100,000 in deposit:
| Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Mortgage (4× €60k) | €240,000 |
| Deposit (savings + family gift) | €100,000 |
| Property price | €340,000 |
What About Monthly Costs?
Being approved for a mortgage is one thing. Living with the repayments on a single income is another. At €60k gross, your take-home is roughly €3,800/month. Here's what housing costs look like on a €240k mortgage:
| Cost | Monthly |
|---|---|
| Mortgage (€240k @ 3.9%, 30yr) | €1,131 |
| Home insurance | €60 |
| Mortgage protection | €30 |
| LPT | €25 |
| Energy bills (BER-dependent) | €130–€220 |
| Maintenance | €200 |
| Total | €1,576–€1,666 |
That's 41–44% of your take-home pay. It's tight, and it leaves roughly €2,100–€2,200 for everything else — groceries, transport, utilities, social life, savings. Achievable, but there's no room for financial surprises.
The Honest Verdict
Can you buy a house in Dublin on one income? Yes — but only with government support (HTB + FHS), or by targeting the commuter belt, or with a substantial deposit. The Central Bank rules make it mathematically impossible for a single earner below ~€125k to buy at Dublin's median price without leveraging at least one support scheme.
The good news: the support schemes exist, they work, and they can genuinely bridge the gap. The key is knowing exactly which ones apply to you and stacking them effectively.
Your Next Steps
- Calculate your exact position: Affordability Calculator
- Check your HTB refund: Help to Buy Calculator
- Model the FHS equity share: First Home Scheme Calculator
- Check LAHL eligibility: LAHL Checker
- See the total cost: Total Cost Calculator