Buyer Resources June 7, 2026

Income Needed to Buy a Home in Renton WA 2026

Renton is the city I price homes in more than anywhere else. I do BPO work across south and east King County every week, which means I’m pulling comps in the Highlands, Benson Hill, Talbot Hill, and Kennydale constantly. When buyers ask me what income they need to get into Renton, I don’t give them a guess — I give them the payment math.

Here’s what that math looks like in June 2026.

The short version: to buy a median-priced single-family home in Renton, most lenders want to see household income in the $130,000 to $175,000 range — significantly more accessible than Bellevue, Issaquah, or Sammamish, but still a real number that requires planning. The range shifts by $40,000 or more depending on which neighborhood you’re targeting and how much you put down.

Quick Answer

For a median-priced single-family home in Renton — around $657,000 to $700,000 in early 2026 — lenders using a standard 28% housing ratio expect household income of roughly $130,000 to $160,000 with a 20% down payment at current rates. Total monthly costs including taxes, insurance, and maintenance run between $3,800 and $4,500. Down payment assistance through WSHFC can reduce loan amounts and make lower income levels viable for first-time buyers.

The Renton Price Landscape Right Now

Renton isn’t one market. It runs from sub-$300,000 condos to $850,000-plus single-family homes on the Lake Washington waterfront side, and the income math shifts significantly across that range.

Here’s where the neighborhoods sit as of mid-2026:

Kennydale / Lake Washington

$800K – $1.1M+

Water proximity, views, larger lots. Renton’s premium tier.

Renton Highlands

$700K – $850K

Newer construction, strong school proximity, employment corridor access.

Benson Hill

~$675K avg

Absorbing demand from buyers priced out further north. Rising.

Central / South Renton

$620K – $680K

Near citywide median. Older stock, mixed conditions, price-sensitive buyers.

Talbot Hill / South Entry-Level

$550K – $620K

Most affordable detached homes. Some need work. Best entry point.

Condos (Citywide)

~$270K avg

Completely different income equation. Clearest path for buyers below single-family thresholds.

Renton WA home prices by neighborhood 2026 — Kennydale $800K-$1.1M, Renton Highlands $700K-$850K, Benson Hill $675K, Central Renton $620K-$680K, Condos $270K
Renton isn’t one market — it’s a full price spectrum. Your income requirement changes dramatically based on which tier you’re targeting.

The Income Math by Price Point

I’m running these numbers at 6.5% on a 30-year fixed — right in the middle of where Washington rates have been sitting in June 2026 — and a 20% down payment. Property taxes use King County’s effective rate of about 0.83%.

$550K

Talbot Hill / entry-level

Down payment: $110,000

P&I: ~$2,781/mo

Taxes: ~$381/mo

Ins + reserve: ~$350/mo

Total monthly

~$3,512

Income needed

~$150K/yr

$660K

Citywide median

Down payment: $132,000

P&I: ~$3,338/mo

Taxes: ~$457/mo

Ins + reserve: ~$390/mo

Total monthly

~$4,185

Income needed

~$179K/yr

$750K

Highlands / Benson Hill upper

Down payment: $150,000

P&I: ~$3,793/mo

Taxes: ~$519/mo

Ins + reserve: ~$430/mo

Total monthly

~$4,742

Income needed

~$203K/yr

These are conventional lender standards using the 28% front-end housing ratio. Many buyers also qualify using a 36% to 43% total debt-to-income ratio, which can allow lower income levels if other debts are minimal.

For a full breakdown of what ownership actually costs beyond the mortgage, the Total Cost of Homeownership in King County 2026 post walks through every line item.

How Renton Compares to Kent and Auburn

Kent sits at a median around $646,000 — close to Renton’s but slightly below. The income math at Kent’s median is nearly identical to Renton’s entry-level single-family range. What Kent has going for it: slightly more inventory and a lower median price on homes in comparable condition. What Renton has: better freeway access to Bellevue and the Eastside tech corridor via I-405.

Auburn runs $450,000 to $650,000 depending heavily on neighborhood, with entry-level homes pulling the average down. For first-time buyers with household income in the $100,000 to $130,000 range, Auburn is where the payment math starts working without assistance. Auburn also has the Sounder South commuter rail, which changes the math for Seattle-bound workers.

Renton sits in the middle on price but typically beats both on commute versatility — you can reach Seattle, Bellevue, and the airport in comparable time. If your budget is tight and commute isn’t a deciding factor, Auburn’s price-per-square-foot is still the best in King County at this level. If you want commute flexibility, Renton is the answer.

Down Payment Assistance: What Renton Buyers Can Access

More Renton buyers qualify for assistance than they think. The income limits are broader than most people assume, and Renton’s price range sits squarely in the eligible zone for Washington’s main programs.

WSHFC Home Advantage is the state’s primary first-time buyer program. It provides a deferred second mortgage covering up to 5% of the loan amount at 0% interest — no payments required for 30 years. The income limit for King County is $145,000 for most household sizes. At Renton’s median price, that makes Home Advantage relevant for buyers in roughly the $100,000 to $145,000 household income band — a large portion of the market.

At the median price of $660,000 with 5% down, 5% assistance equals approximately $31,000 — enough to meaningfully reduce either the down payment burden or the loan amount.

The King County Down Payment Assistance 2026 guide walks through how to combine WSHFC and KCHA programs to maximize what you receive.

Washington State WSHFC Home Advantage down payment assistance program 2026 — up to 5% loan amount, 0% interest, 30-year deferred payment, $145K income limit King County
WSHFC Home Advantage covers buyers up to $145,000 household income in King County — a large share of the Renton buyer pool qualifies and doesn’t know it.

What This Means for Renton Buyers

If your household income is in the $100,000 to $130,000 range, Renton’s condo market and the entry-level south Renton single-family pockets are where the math works — especially with down payment assistance reducing the loan amount.

If your income is $130,000 to $160,000, the citywide median single-family market is within reach, though you’ll want minimal other debt to keep your total debt-to-income ratio under 43%, which is the typical conventional loan ceiling.

Above $160,000, you have access to most of Renton including Renton Highlands, Benson Hill upper, and Kennydale’s lower range — and above $200,000 you’re looking at Kennydale and the lakefront streets.

If you’re putting less than 20% down, make sure you understand whether FHA or conventional makes more sense at your credit score. The FHA vs. Conventional Loan in King County post breaks down the PMI difference and loan limit considerations.

From the Field

I price homes in Renton every week. What I see in the BPO work: the buyers who’ve already run the income math before they start shopping close faster and negotiate better. They know exactly which price tier they’re targeting, so they don’t waste time falling in love with a home that’s $80,000 above what their lender will support. In Renton right now, where the $620,000 to $680,000 range is moving in 15 to 30 days on average, that preparation gap matters.

King County Specifics: What Renton Buyers Actually Pay

Property taxes in Renton run an effective rate of about 0.80% to 0.85% — right around the King County average of 0.83%. On a $660,000 home, that’s roughly $5,300 to $5,600 per year, or $440 to $465 per month.

Current 30-year fixed rates in Washington are running 6.31% to 6.63% as of June 2026. That spread changes your payment by about $115 per month on a $528,000 loan — real money over 30 years. Shopping two or three lenders and working with a good mortgage broker typically lands buyers at the lower end of that range.

For current rate movement and what’s driving it, the King County Mortgage Rates 2026 post has the context every buyer needs before locking a rate.

Frequently Asked Questions

What income do you need to buy a home in Renton WA?

For the citywide median around $657,000 to $700,000, conventional lenders typically want household income of $130,000 to $180,000 depending on down payment size and existing debt. At Renton’s entry-level single-family range ($550,000 to $620,000), income requirements drop to $110,000 to $150,000. Down payment assistance through WSHFC can reduce loan amounts and make lower income levels viable for first-time buyers.

Is Renton more affordable than Bellevue and Issaquah?

Yes, significantly. Bellevue’s median runs around $1.45 million and Issaquah’s citywide median is approximately $1.05 million. Renton’s single-family median of $657,000 to $700,000 is roughly half of Bellevue’s price point. The trade-off is school district — Bellevue and Issaquah have consistently top-rated districts. Renton’s schools vary by neighborhood.

How much is a down payment on a home in Renton?

At the citywide median of approximately $660,000, a 20% down payment is $132,000 and a 10% down payment is $66,000. For entry-level homes around $550,000, a 20% down payment is $110,000. With WSHFC Home Advantage, eligible buyers can reduce the down payment to as low as 3% to 5% and receive up to 5% of the loan amount in assistance.

Do down payment assistance programs work in Renton?

Yes — and more buyers qualify than realize it. WSHFC Home Advantage has a $145,000 income limit for King County, which covers a large portion of first-time buyers targeting Renton’s median range. At a $660,000 purchase price with 5% down, the assistance can provide up to approximately $31,000 — a meaningful reduction in what you need to bring to closing.

How does Renton compare to Kent and Auburn for affordability?

Kent’s median is just below Renton’s at roughly $646,000 — similar income math. Auburn has a wider price range with entry-level homes in the $450,000 to $550,000 band, making it more accessible for buyers with household income under $120,000. Renton’s advantage over both is commute versatility — direct I-405 access to the Eastside is harder to replicate from Auburn or Kent.

What is Renton’s property tax rate?

Renton’s effective property tax rate runs about 0.80% to 0.85% of assessed value, close to the King County average. On a $660,000 home, that’s approximately $5,280 to $5,610 per year, or $440 to $468 per month.

Ready to Run the Real Numbers?

If you’re looking at homes in Renton and want an honest read on what you can buy in today’s market — not a calculator estimate — reach out. I can walk you through the payment math, flag which neighborhoods fit your budget, and tell you what I’m seeing in the BPO work I do here every week.

Gregory Dorrell · Coldwell Banker Bain

Renton is my market.

Email Greg
More Resources