What Salary Do You Need for a R2m Home Loan in South Africa?
What salary do you need for a R2m home loan in South Africa? At 10.5% prime, you need approximately R66,500/month gross. See full affordability breakdown for 2026.
Bond amount
R2m
Monthly repayment (20yr)
R19,968
Gross salary needed
R66,500/mo
Stress-test salary
R75,500/mo
How Banks Calculate Affordability for a R2m Bond
South African banks apply a '30% of gross income' rule as a starting point โ your monthly bond repayment should not exceed 30% of your gross (before-tax) monthly salary. At 10.5% prime over 20 years, a R2m bond costs approximately R19,968/month, requiring a gross monthly income of at least R66,500.
But banks don't just look at income โ they look at net disposable income after all existing monthly debt obligations. Every R1,000 in existing monthly debt (car payment, personal loan, credit card minimum) reduces your qualifying bond amount by approximately R100,000. If you're targeting a R2m bond, you want your monthly debt obligations as low as possible before applying.
Banks also stress-test your affordability at rates 2% above the current prime rate โ i.e. at 12.5%. This means you need to qualify for a monthly repayment of R22,723/month, requiring a gross income of approximately R75,500/month. This is a more realistic figure to target to ensure smooth approval.
What Affects Your Qualifying Bond Amount
Your credit score is the single most powerful variable in the approval decision. A score of 700+ (out of 705 on TransUnion's scale) opens the door to prime minus offers and smooth approvals. A score below 640 may mean your application is declined outright by some banks. Check your score free via your bank's app or at annualcreditreport equivalent services before applying.
Deposit size directly impacts the bond amount you need. To afford a R2m property without needing R2m in bond financing, consider whether you can bring a 10โ20% deposit from savings or TFSA withdrawals. A 10% deposit on this bond size means only financing R1,800,000 โ reducing monthly payments and typically securing a better interest rate.
Employment type matters significantly. Permanent salaried employees have the easiest path to approval. Contract workers need 12+ months of consistent income history. Self-employed applicants need 2 years of SARS-compliant financials showing consistent income. Part-time or commission-based income is assessed more conservatively โ banks typically use only 50โ75% of variable income components.
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Disclaimer: This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or credit advice. Always consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.