The salary you’d likely need to comfortably get a £300,000 mortgage in the UK depends on a few factors (interest rate, term, other debts, deposit, etc.), but here’s a rough guideline — and how to think about it.
✅ Typical salary needed for a £300 k mortgage
- Most lenders in the UK assess mortgage affordability using a multiple of about 4–4.5× your gross annual income. echofinance.co.uk+2fairmortgages.co.uk+2
- Based on that: for a £300,000 mortgage, you’d generally need a salary of ~£66,000–£75,000 per year (if you’re the sole applicant). echofinance.co.uk+2Mortgage Bridge+2
- If you and a partner/other co-applicant apply jointly, that income threshold refers to your combined income. YesCanDo Money+2Loan Corp+2
Some lenders — under special circumstances (good credit history, stable income, larger deposit, supplemental/bonus income) — may stretch to 5× or even 6× your income, which lowers the required salary significantly (e.g. ~£50,000 for a 6× multiple). Money To The Masses+2AS Mortgage Services+2
💷 Monthly repayments & income-to-debt ratio
- On a £300,000 mortgage, monthly repayments typically fall between £1,400 and £1,900/month, depending on interest rate and loan term. Mortgage Bridge+2Mortgageable+2
- Lenders also look at your monthly debt-to-income ratio (including any other debts: credit cards, car loans, etc.) when deciding — not just maximum borrowing multiple. Money To The Masses+2Loan Corp+2
- A common “safe” guideline is that your mortgage payment (and any other debts) should stay below a certain % of your gross monthly income. Some lenders refer to the “front-end ratio” (for housing costs) and “back-end ratio” (for all debts) when assessing affordability. Homemove+2NerdWallet+2
So even if your salary is in the acceptable band (say ~£70,000), high other debts or expenses could make a £300,000 mortgage unaffordable — or force you to go for a longer loan term / higher deposit / lower loan amount.
⚠️ What this depends on (your personal situation matters)
The salary guidance above is a rule-of-thumb. What lenders actually consider depends on:
- Other monthly debts (loans, credit-cards, car finance, etc.) Money To The Masses+2Loan Corp+2
- Size of your deposit (loan-to-value ratio) — a higher deposit often improves affordability. Money To The Masses+1
- Stability of income (employed vs contract vs variable/bonus vs self-employed). Mortgage Bridge+1
- Interest rates and mortgage term — both influence monthly payments. Mortgageable+2Our Life Plan+2
🎯 What this means for you (if you move to UK)
If you plan to apply for a mortgage in the UK (given your interest in working there) and aim for ~£300,000:
- Try to aim for a salary (or combined income) of at least ~£70,000/year, to be in a comfortable “safe” zone
- Keep your monthly debts (loans, credit-cards, etc.) low so repayments don’t eat too much of income
- Save for a decent deposit — a lower loan-to-value ratio improves your approval chances
- Be ready for monthly repayments of roughly £1,400–£1,900, so ensure your post-tax take-home pay supports that








