Indiana Divorce Housing Calculator
Should you keep or sell the house in Indiana? This calculator uses Indiana-specific property taxes, insurance costs, and housing data to help you decide.
Housing costs in Indiana
As of our last data update, the median home value in Indiana is approximately $230,000. Property taxes run 0.84% of home value ($1,932/year on the median home). Homeowners insurance averages $3,094/year.
For the median-priced home in Indiana, estimated costs could be approximately $610/month in property tax, insurance, and maintenance alone — before the mortgage payment.
Renting vs. buying in Indiana
Indiana's price-to-rent ratio suggests that annual rent runs roughly 8.5% of home value. For the median home, that's about $1,629/month in rent — which may be comparable to or more than the total cost of ownership.
Selling costs in Indiana
Closing costs in Indiana average 1.0% of the sale price. On the median home, that's $2,277 in closing costs. Combined with agent commissions (typically 5-6%), selling can cost $14,927 or more.
Related resources
Keeping Your Home After Divorce in Indiana
Housing in Indiana is among the more affordable in the United States, with median home values around $230,000. This can make the keep-vs-sell decision more manageable for a single-income household than in higher-cost states. However, lower home values also mean less equity to divide, which can limit financial flexibility after the settlement.
Indiana uses equitable distribution for dividing marital property, meaning the court divides assets fairly based on the circumstances — which is not necessarily 50/50. Factors like each spouse's income, contributions to the marriage, and future earning capacity all affect how the home equity is split. Beyond the mortgage, homeownership in Indiana carries ongoing costs: property taxes average 0.84% of home value, and homeowners insurance runs approximately $3,094 per year. Add maintenance — typically 1-2% of home value annually — and a $230,000 home in Indiana costs roughly $610/month before the mortgage payment.
For Indiana residents considering whether to keep the family home after divorce, the key question is whether total housing costs — mortgage, property taxes, insurance, and maintenance — stay within 28-36% of gross income. A mortgage payment that was comfortable on two incomes can quickly become a strain on one. The calculator above lets you enter your specific numbers to see the true monthly cost and compare keeping the home against selling and renting. Even if you can technically afford the payment, tying up most of your equity in the house may limit your ability to save, invest, or cover unexpected expenses — so it's worth modeling both scenarios before deciding.
Frequently asked questions
Can I afford to keep the house after divorce in Indiana?
In Indiana, the median home value is $230,000 with a 0.84% property tax rate. Use the calculator above to enter your specific home value, mortgage balance, and income to see whether keeping the house is affordable on one income.
What are the real costs of keeping a home in Indiana?
Beyond the mortgage, homeownership in Indiana includes property tax (0.84% average rate), homeowner's insurance ($3,094/year average), and maintenance (typically 1-2% of home value per year). Our calculator adds all of these up so you can see the true monthly cost.
Should I sell the house or keep it in my Indiana divorce?
The answer depends on your income, mortgage balance, and whether the total housing cost (mortgage, taxes, insurance, maintenance) stays under 28-36% of your gross income. In Indiana, comparable rent averages can help you compare the cost of keeping vs. renting. Try both scenarios in the calculator above.
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