At $50,000/yr, median rent would be about 23.69% of gross income. This falls in the “Very affordable” bucket, and the recommended rent ceiling at this salary is $1,250/mo. In this area (lower-cost), the model’s rent math puts housing in a “Comfortable” bucket: rent looks comparatively manageable and rent (housing) is the main lever in the estimates.

Salary
$50,000/yr
Median rent (midpoint)
987/mo
Rent share of gross
23.69%
Take-home (est.)
3,058.08/mo

Cost-of-living tier: low

What drives the budget here?

This area is generally lower-cost based on a cost-of-living index of 88.4 (U.S. average = 100). Typical rent-to-gross is in the Comfortable range (using the page’s rent and income inputs).

In the site’s estimated monthly breakdown, the largest category is Rent (housing) (987/mo), so that’s the biggest lever for moving the overall budget up or down.

Practical next steps

  • Rent looks comparatively manageable for the typical household. Your biggest wins usually come from planning for the non-housing categories (utilities, groceries, etc.) so totals stay predictable.
  • State income tax is on the higher side in this state (6.85%). That reduces take-home pay, so “affordable” decisions should be based on net income, not just gross.

Your budget

Monthly gross: $4,166.667 · After-tax (est.): $3,058.08

30% rule threshold: $1,250/mo max rent

Median rent in Rochester

1BR: $883/mo · 2BR: $1,091/mo · Midpoint: $987/mo

Rent burden (rent as % of gross): 23.69%

Verdict: Very affordable

Median rent is $263 below your 30% max.

Recommended rent range

$1,041.67 – $1,250/mo (25–30% of gross)