Neal Caffrey

AMI Income Limit Calculator

AMI Income Limit Calculator

AMI is county-specific. This is for your reference only.
Number of people in your household.
Gross income from all sources for all household members.
Important Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates of Area Median Income (AMI) and income limits based on state-level data. AMI is set annually by HUD and varies significantly by county (or metropolitan area) and household size. This tool uses a state-based multiplier for estimation purposes only and is not a substitute for official HUD data. For official income limits, you must check the specific figures for your county on the HUD User website or with the housing provider. All eligibility decisions are based on the official county-specific AMI.

What Is Area Median Income (AMI)?

Area Median Income (AMI) is the middle income level for a specific area. It is calculated each year by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).

In simple terms:

  • If you line up all households in an area by income
  • The income in the middle is the median income
  • That number becomes the AMI

Housing programs use AMI to decide who qualifies for affordable housing.

For official data, HUD publishes AMI figures each year through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development on the HUD User website.


Why AMI Percentages Matter

Housing programs rarely use 100% of AMI. Instead, they use a percentage of AMI.

Common income limits include:

  • 30% AMI – Extremely Low Income
  • 50% AMI – Very Low Income
  • 60% AMI – Low Income (common for tax credit housing)
  • 80% AMI – Standard affordable housing limit
  • 120% AMI – Moderate income programs

For example:

If the AMI in your area is $100,000:

  • 80% AMI = $80,000
  • 60% AMI = $60,000
  • 50% AMI = $50,000

If your household income is below the required limit, you may qualify.


What Is an AMI Income Limit Calculator?

An AMI Income Limit Calculator is a tool that estimates:

  1. The Area Median Income for your location
  2. The income limit based on a selected AMI percentage
  3. Whether your income is below or above that limit
  4. Your likely eligibility status

It provides a fast estimate before you apply.

This is helpful because AMI varies by:

  • State
  • County or metro area
  • Household size

How This AMI Calculator Works

The calculator you shared uses a simplified but structured method.

Here is how it works behind the scenes.

1. Base National AMI

It starts with a base national AMI estimate for a 4-person household:

$95,000

This is used as a general reference point.


2. State Multiplier

Each state has a multiplier that adjusts the base AMI.

For example:

  • California multiplier: 1.40
  • Mississippi multiplier: 0.75
  • Texas multiplier: 0.88
  • New York multiplier: 1.32

If the base AMI is $95,000:

California estimate:

95,000 × 1.40 = $133,000

Mississippi estimate:

95,000 × 0.75 = $71,250

This reflects cost-of-living differences across states.


3. Household Size Adjustment

AMI changes depending on how many people live in your household.

The calculator adjusts like this:

  • 1 person: 70% of 4-person AMI
  • 2 people: 80%
  • 3 people: 90%
  • 4 people: 100%
  • More than 4: adds 8% per extra person

Example:

If estimated AMI for 4 people is $100,000:

  • 1 person ≈ $70,000
  • 2 people ≈ $80,000
  • 3 people ≈ $90,000
  • 5 people ≈ $108,000

This mirrors how HUD scales income limits.


4. Selected Income Percentage

The calculator then applies the chosen AMI percentage.

For example:

If AMI = $120,000
Selected percentage = 80%

120,000 × 0.80 = $96,000 income limit

That becomes your income cap.


5. Eligibility Comparison

Finally, the calculator compares:

Your Income vs. Income Limit

It returns one of three outcomes:

  • Likely Eligible
  • Income Slightly High
  • Ineligible

It also shows the exact comparison in dollars.


How to Use the AMI Income Limit Calculator

Using the calculator is simple.

Step 1: Select Your State

Choose your state from the dropdown.

Step 2: Enter County or Metro Area

This is for reference. Official AMI is county-specific.

Step 3: Enter Household Size

Include everyone who lives in the household.

Step 4: Choose Income Limit Percentage

Select 30%, 50%, 60%, 80%, or 120%.
You can also enter a custom percentage like 0.75 for 75%.

Step 5: Enter Total Annual Household Income

Enter gross income before taxes for all household members.

Step 6: Click Calculate

You will see:

  • Estimated Area Median Income
  • Selected Income Limit
  • Income comparison
  • Eligibility status
  • Reminder to confirm with official HUD data

Example Scenario

Let’s walk through a real example.

State: Texas
Household Size: 4
Selected Limit: 80%
Household Income: $70,000

If estimated AMI = $83,600 (example)

80% limit:

83,600 × 0.80 = $66,880

If your income is $70,000:

Result: ABOVE limit
Status: Ineligible

This helps you understand your position instantly.


Why This Tool Is Helpful

An AMI Income Limit Calculator helps you:

  • Check affordable housing eligibility quickly
  • Avoid applying for programs you do not qualify for
  • Compare different AMI percentages
  • Understand how household size affects limits
  • Prepare before contacting a housing provider

It saves time and reduces confusion.


Important Limitations

This tool provides estimates only.

Key points:

  • Real AMI is county-specific
  • HUD updates AMI annually
  • Some metro areas differ within the same state
  • Housing providers use official HUD figures

Always confirm with:

  • The property manager
  • Local housing authority
  • The official HUD income limit database

The calculator clearly states this in its disclaimer.


Who Should Use an AMI Income Limit Calculator?

This tool is useful for:

  • Renters applying for affordable housing
  • Families applying for income-based apartments
  • People researching LIHTC properties
  • Housing counselors
  • Real estate professionals

It gives a fast income screening before formal application.


Frequently Asked Questions

What does 80% AMI mean?

It means your income must be at or below 80% of the Area Median Income for your area and household size.


Is AMI the same in every county?

No. AMI varies by county and metropolitan area.


Is this calculator official?

No. It is an estimate tool. Official limits are set by HUD.


Does household income include all income?

Yes. It includes gross income from all household members.