AZ physician loans 100% financing · no PMI · residents qualify · Call Mike (480) 296-6513
Arizona Physician + Medical Professional Mortgages · Cornerstone First Mortgage · NMLS #173855 Call Mike Certo · (480) 296-6513
Call Mike Free consult

How much house can an Arizona physician afford?

Mike Certo ·

The answer depends on career stage + specialty + employer + student loans. Here's the real math for AZ physicians at each level.

Resident affordability (PGY-1 through PGY-4+)

Residents make $60K-$85K depending on year + program. Standard mortgage math says you can afford $250K-$340K. Physician loan math (using attending contract) says you can afford $600K+ if you have a signed attending offer.

Most AZ residents who buy use one of two paths: 1. Modest starter home ($300K-$425K) — manageable on resident income alone, lifestyle-friendly 2. Attending-contract aggressive buy ($600K-$800K) — using signed attending position as qualifying income; closing date close to attending start

Both work with physician loans. Which fits depends on: - Family situation (single resident vs married with kids) - Signed attending position in hand or just hoping - Cash for closing costs ($5K-$15K typical) - Comfort with mortgage payment during transition period

Fellow affordability (PGY-5+)

Fellows make $70K-$95K. Higher than residents but still below attending levels.

Fellowships typically convert to attending within 12-24 months. Most fellows who buy use the same "attending-contract aggressive buy" strategy, since they're closer to the income jump.

Realistic AZ fellow buy: $500K-$750K with attending contract.

New attending affordability (Years 1-3)

Income varies massively by specialty. Real AZ examples:

Specialty Year 1 attending Comfortable AZ home price
Family Medicine $235K-$260K $600K-$700K
Pediatrics $250K-$275K $625K-$725K
Internal Medicine $260K-$295K $650K-$775K
Emergency Medicine $275K-$340K $700K-$850K
Hospitalist $260K-$310K $650K-$800K
Psychiatry $260K-$320K $650K-$800K
OB/GYN $300K-$380K $750K-$950K
General Surgery $340K-$420K $850K-$1.05M
Anesthesiology $390K-$480K $975K-$1.2M
Cardiology $410K-$520K $1.05M-$1.3M
Orthopedic Surgery $475K-$650K $1.2M-$1.65M
Neurosurgery $625K-$850K $1.6M-$2.1M
Dermatology $390K-$500K $975K-$1.25M
Radiology $390K-$510K $975K-$1.3M
Plastic Surgery (private) $400K-$650K $1M-$1.65M
Dentist (general) $175K-$240K $440K-$600K
Dentist (specialty — OMFS, endo) $300K-$500K $750K-$1.25M

These assume: - Physician loan, 100% financing - 6.625-pricing varies by file specifics - 28% front-end DTI target - Maricopa County property tax (0.51%) - $150K student loan balance on IBR (industry average for new attendings)

Established attending (Years 4+)

After 3-4 years, AZ attending incomes typically reach the upper end of specialty ranges. Combined with built-up cash savings, established attendings can buy more aggressively:

  • Family Medicine attending year 6 — $700K-$850K comfortable, $1M reach
  • Internal Medicine attending year 6 — $800K-$1M comfortable
  • General Surgery attending year 8 — $1.2M-$1.5M comfortable
  • Orthopedic Surgery attending year 10 — $2M+ comfortable

Established attendings often have substantial Roth + 401(k) contributions + brokerage accounts that can support asset-based qualifying for premium purchases.

How student loans change the math

Most physicians have $150K-$350K in student loans. How they're handled dramatically affects affordability:

IBR or PAYE (income-based payment)

Most physician loans use actual IBR payment. On $200K balance with $200/mo IBR, that's $200 in DTI. Doesn't crush affordability.

Standard 10-year repayment

$200K balance = ~$2,200/mo standard payment. Crushes DTI; reduces affordable home price by $250K+.

REPAYE / IBR + PSLF

For physicians at non-profit hospitals (Mayo, HonorHealth nonprofit segments, Banner UMC, university medical centers), Public Service Loan Forgiveness wipes student loans after 10 years of qualifying payments. Use IBR while in PSLF qualification.

Refinanced private student loans

Some physicians refinance to lower rates with SoFi or LendKey. Fixed monthly payment counts in DTI. May be higher or lower than IBR depending on refi terms.

How AZ employer impacts affordability

Non-profit AZ employers (PSLF-eligible)

Mayo Clinic Phoenix + Scottsdale (non-profit), Banner Health (non-profit), Tucson UMC, HonorHealth (most divisions) — all qualifying for PSLF. Use IBR + plan for loan forgiveness.

For-profit + private practice

HonorHealth's for-profit divisions, private practices, urgent care chains — typically not PSLF-eligible. May refinance student loans privately for lower rates.

Academic medical centers

Banner UMC (Tucson), Banner UMC (Phoenix), Mayo Clinic — academic positions sometimes have lower base salary but stronger PSLF + research stipends.

Real example — AZ Family Medicine attending

New attending at Banner Family Health Phoenix, year 1, $245K base salary, $185K student loans on IBR ($165/mo), $25K savings, 720 FICO. Targeting $625K Phoenix home.

Affordability math

  • Monthly gross income: $20,417
  • IBR student loan: $165/mo
  • Other monthly debts: $400 (car)
  • Target PITI: $4,200/mo (front-end 21%)
  • DTI back-end: 23% (very comfortable)
  • Physician loan 100% LTV pricing varies by file specifics on $625K = $4,055/mo P&I + $266 tax + $130 insurance = $4,451/mo PITI

Within DTI target. Approved without issue.

Cash needed: ~$15K for closing costs (lender credit + savings cover it). Real out-of-pocket at closing: $5K-$8K.

How Mike runs YOUR specific numbers

Send these details + I'll run scenarios: - Your degree + specialty + career stage - Current monthly income (or attending contract details) - Student loan balance + monthly payment - Other monthly debts (car, credit card minimums, etc.) - AZ market you're targeting + approximate price range

Contact Mike or call (480) 296-6513.

Back to blog