Calculate your front-end and back-end debt-to-income ratio. See how lenders evaluate your DTI and whether you qualify for a mortgage or loan.
Your debt-to-income ratio (DTI) is one of the most important numbers in personal finance. Lenders use it to determine whether you can afford a new loan, credit card, or mortgage. A high DTI signals that too much of your income goes to debt payments, making you a risky borrower.
The Debt-to-Income Ratio Calculator computes both your front-end DTI (housing costs only) and back-end DTI (all monthly debts), then compares your ratios against common lender thresholds. You will see exactly where you stand and what you might need to change to qualify for a mortgage or other financing.
Understanding your DTI before applying for credit helps you avoid surprises and gives you a clear target for debt reduction. Even a few percentage points of improvement can mean the difference between approval and denial — or a better interest rate. Calculating your DTI ahead of time lets you adjust balances or payments to improve your position before a lender pulls your file.
Most borrowers find out their DTI is too high after being denied. This calculator lets you pre-screen yourself using the same formula lenders use. You can model scenarios — paying off a car loan, increasing income, or reducing housing costs — to see exactly how each change affects your DTI and borrowing capacity.
Front-end DTI = (Monthly housing costs / Gross monthly income) × 100. Back-end DTI = (Total monthly debt payments / Gross monthly income) × 100.
Result: Front-end DTI: 24%, Back-end DTI: 36%
With $7,500 gross monthly income, $1,800 in housing costs, and $900 in other debt payments, the front-end DTI is 24% ($1,800/$7,500) and the back-end DTI is 36% ($2,700/$7,500). This is at the threshold for conventional mortgages (typically 28%/36%) but comfortably within FHA limits (31%/43%).
DTI measures your ability to manage monthly payments and repay borrowed money. Lenders view it as a proxy for financial stress — the higher your DTI, the more likely you are to miss payments when unexpected expenses arise. It is typically the second most important Factor after credit score in loan underwriting.
Conventional conforming mortgages: 28% front-end, 36-45% back-end. FHA mortgages: 31% front-end, 43-50% back-end. VA mortgages: 41% back-end (no strict front-end limit). USDA loans: 29% front-end, 41% back-end. Personal loans: generally under 40-45% back-end.
Eliminating debts is the most direct approach: paying off a $300/month car loan reduces DTI by 4% on $7,500 income. Refinancing to extend terms lowers monthly payments but increases total cost. Increasing income has the most leverage — a $500/month raise improves DTI across all debts simultaneously.
A passing DTI does not mean you can comfortably afford the debt. Lenders use gross income, but you live on net income. A 43% DTI on gross income might represent 55-60% of your take-home pay. Always stress-test your budget at your actual income before taking on new debt.
For conventional mortgages, lenders prefer a front-end DTI below 28% and back-end DTI below 36%. FHA loans allow up to 31%/43%. VA loans focus on the back-end ratio with a guideline of 41%. For personal loans and credit cards, most lenders want a back-end DTI under 40-45%.
Front-end DTI includes only housing-related expenses (mortgage/rent, property tax, insurance, HOA). Back-end DTI includes all monthly debt obligations — housing plus auto loans, student loans, credit cards, personal loans, child support, and any other recurring debts.
When applying for a mortgage, lenders use the proposed mortgage payment, not your current rent. When applying for other loans, your rent or mortgage payment is included in the housing portion of DTI. The back-end DTI always includes housing costs.
No. Utilities (electric, water, internet, phone) are not included in DTI calculations. Only contractual debt obligations and housing costs are counted. Subscriptions, groceries, and discretionary spending are also excluded.
The fastest ways are: pay off small debts entirely (eliminates the monthly payment), increase income (overtime, second job, raise), refinance existing debts to lower payments (longer term or lower rate), or add a co-borrower. Paying down credit card balances also helps if it lowers minimum payments.
Lenders use gross (pre-tax) income from all verifiable sources: salary, bonuses (if consistent), overtime, commissions, rental income, investment income, alimony received, and Social Security. Self-employed borrowers typically use a two-year average from tax returns.
Yes, in some cases. FHA loans allow up to 50% back-end DTI with compensating factors (high credit score, large down payment, significant reserves). VA loans are flexible as well. Some Non-QM lenders go higher. However, high-DTI loans often come with higher rates or additional requirements.
DTI itself does not appear on your credit report or directly affect your credit score. However, the debts that create a high DTI (high credit card balances, many loans) do impact your credit utilization ratio, which does affect your score. Reducing debt improves both DTI and credit score.