Calculate your front-end and back-end debt-to-income ratios and compare them against conventional, FHA, and VA lending thresholds instantly.
Your debt-to-income (DTI) ratio is the single most important number lenders examine when deciding whether to approve your mortgage application and at what terms. This calculator computes both the front-end ratio (housing costs divided by gross income) and the back-end ratio (all monthly debts divided by gross income), then compares your results against the thresholds for conventional loans (28/36), FHA loans (31/43), and VA loans (no front-end/41).
Understanding your DTI before you apply gives you a clear picture of where you stand and what you need to improve. A borrower with a 32% front-end ratio would fail conventional guidelines but pass FHA. Knowing this ahead of time lets you target the right loan program or take steps to reduce your ratio.
The calculator also highlights how much monthly debt you would need to eliminate — or how much additional income you would need — to bring your ratios within each program's limits, giving you an actionable improvement plan.
Lenders pull your DTI from your application, but by then it's too late to make changes. Running the numbers yourself months before applying lets you strategically pay down debts, delay new borrowing, or increase income to hit the thresholds that unlock the best rates and lowest fees. This tool shows you exactly where each dollar of debt reduction has the most impact on your qualifying ratios.
Front-End DTI = (Monthly Housing Costs / Gross Monthly Income) × 100 Back-End DTI = (Monthly Housing + All Other Debts) / Gross Monthly Income × 100 Conventional: Front ≤ 28%, Back ≤ 36% FHA: Front ≤ 31%, Back ≤ 43% VA: No front-end limit, Back ≤ 41%
Result: Front-end: 26.3% | Back-end: 33.8%
Housing of $2,100 / $8,000 income = 26.3% front-end. Total debts of $2,700 / $8,000 = 33.8% back-end. This borrower passes all conventional guidelines (28/36), all FHA limits (31/43), and VA limits (no front/41). They have headroom before hitting any ceiling.
While credit scores determine your interest rate, DTI determines whether you qualify at all. A borrower with an 800 credit score but a 50% back-end DTI will be denied by most conventional lenders. Conversely, a 680 score with a 30% DTI can get approved, albeit at a slightly higher rate. Focus on both metrics, but prioritize DTI if you're near the qualifying line.
Conventional loans follow the 28/36 standard but automated underwriting systems (like Fannie Mae's Desktop Underwriter) sometimes approve up to 45% or even 50% with strong compensating factors. FHA's official limits are 31/43, but manual underwriting can push to 40/50. VA loans have no published front-end limit and use 41% back-end as a guideline, not a hard cap.
If your back-end DTI is 40% and you need to reach 36%, calculate exactly how much monthly debt to eliminate. For someone earning $8,000/month, each percentage point equals $80/month in obligations. Paying off a $320/month car loan drops your ratio by 4 points — enough to cross the threshold.
Most conventional lenders prefer a front-end ratio at or below 28% and a back-end ratio at or below 36%. FHA programs allow up to 31/43, and VA loans often go up to 41% back-end with no formal front-end limit. Lower ratios qualify you for better rates.
The back-end ratio includes all recurring monthly obligations: mortgage PITI, auto loans, student loans, credit card minimum payments, personal loans, child support, and alimony. It does not include utilities, groceries, or subscriptions.
Yes. Any fixed monthly payment obligation reported on your credit report counts. A $400 car lease payment increases your back-end DTI by $400 divided by your gross monthly income. Some lenders exclude debts with fewer than 10 payments remaining.
Some loan programs allow DTI up to 50% with strong compensating factors like a high credit score (740+), large cash reserves (6+ months), or a substantial down payment. FHA manual underwriting can approve back-end ratios up to 50% in certain cases.
The fastest approaches are paying off small debts entirely (removing them from the ratio), increasing income with a raise or side income, and avoiding new debt. Consolidating debts into a lower-payment loan can also help, though it may extend your repayment timeline.
Lenders use gross income (before taxes and deductions). This means your DTI looks better on paper than it feels in practice. When budgeting, consider using net income for a more conservative and realistic picture of what you can actually afford.