Whether a Milwaukee apartment fits your budget comes down to the classic 30 percent rule. This calculator turns your income into a maximum affordable rent and shows which Milwaukee neighborhood tiers land inside that ceiling, so you can apartment-hunt with a clear number in mind.
How it works
The affordability ceiling is a simple share of gross income, and your real ratio is the inverse:
monthly income = annual income / 12
max rent = monthly income × (threshold / 100)
rent-to-income = chosen rent / monthly income
affordable if = chosen rent ≤ max rent
The default threshold is 30 percent of gross income, the figure most landlords screen against, though you can tighten it if you carry debt or want a larger savings cushion.
Example and tips
On a 45,000 salary your gross monthly income is 3,750, so the 30 percent rule
caps rent at 1,125. That comfortably covers Milwaukee’s 1,050 median
one-bedroom, leaving a small margin. If you are eyeing a higher-cost downtown
unit, run the actual asking rent through the tool to see your true rent-to-income
ratio — and consider applying the percentage to take-home pay for a more
conservative target.