How to Calculate Debt-to-Income (DTI) the Smart Way
Debt-to-Income (DTI) measures how much of your monthly income is used for debt payments. Lenders use DTI to assess your repayment capacity and set approval limits.
DTI Formula
DTI = (Total Monthly Debt ÷ Monthly Income) × 100
What Counts as Debt?
- Credit card minimum payments
- Auto, student, and personal loans
- Mortgage or rent payments
- Alimony or child support (if applicable)
Good vs. Bad DTI
- Excellent: < 20%
- Good: 20–36%
- Borderline: 36–43%
- High: 43–50%
- Very High: > 50%
DTI Deep Dive
Debt‑to‑Income compares required monthly debt payments to your verifiable monthly income. Underwriting uses it to gauge repayment capacity, alongside credit, assets, and stability.
Front‑End vs Back‑End
| Type | Includes | Used For |
|---|---|---|
| Front‑End | Housing only (PITI + HOA) | Mortgage affordability gate |
| Back‑End | Housing + all other monthly debts | Overall approval risk |
Program Heuristics (Educational)
| Program | Front | Back |
|---|---|---|
| Conventional | ~28–31% | ~43% |
| FHA | ~31–40% | ~43–50% (with factors) |
| VA | — | ~41% guardrail (residual income focused) |
| USDA | ~29% | ~41% |
Not promises; lenders apply their own guidelines and overlays.
Worked Examples
- Mortgage case: Income $6,000/mo; PITI+HOA $2,000; other debts $300 → Back‑end = (2,000+300)/6,000 = 38.3%.
- Auto case: Income $4,200/mo; housing $1,100; other debts $450 → Back‑end = (1,100+450)/4,200 = 36.9%.
- Borderline to pass: Income $5,500/mo; housing $1,900; other debts $570 → 2,470/5,500 = 44.9%. Pay down cards to cut $110 in minimums → 2,360/5,500 = 42.9%.
Strategy: Move the Math
- Reduce numerator: Lower revolving balances to drop minimums; refinance if it lowers monthly payment.
- Increase denominator: Document stable income (overtime averaged, bonuses with 24‑mo history).
- Timing: Payments must post before statements; underwriters use reported minimums.
Self‑Employed & Variable Income
- Many lenders average 24 months of net income from tax returns (add‑backs vary by program).
- Declining year‑over‑year income may be used at the lower figure.
- Provide P&L and balance sheet if the current year matters; be consistent with deposits.
Co‑Borrowers & Household Notes
- Co‑borrower added: Income and debts combine — DTI can improve if income gain outweighs added debts.
- Non‑borrowing spouse: Local and program rules vary; debts may still be considered in community property states.
- Always confirm how your lender treats joint accounts and authorized users.
Edge Cases & Misconceptions
- Subscriptions, utilities, and groceries are not counted in DTI (but matter for affordability).
- Deferred student loans: programs differ — some use a % of balance if no payment is reported.
- “Paying more this month” doesn’t help unless it changes the reported minimum.
Extended FAQ
Is net or gross income used?
Most underwriting models use gross monthly income. Our calculator supports net to help with personal budgeting.
Do I include rent or just mortgage?
Include your full monthly housing payment: rent, or PITI+HOA if you own.
What about buy‑downs and ARMs?
Some lenders qualify at the note rate, others at a higher qualifying rate. Your effective monthly payment used for DTI may differ.
How fast can I lower DTI?
As fast as your statement cycles: when a lower minimum is reported, your DTI math updates.
How Lenders Calculate Income
W‑2 & Hourly
- Salaried: Use monthly gross (annual ÷ 12).
- Hourly: Hourly rate × average weekly hours × 52 ÷ 12.
- Overtime/Bonus: Often averaged over 24 months; shorter histories may be discounted.
Non‑Taxed & Other Income
- Non‑taxed income gross‑up: Some programs allow multiplying by a gross‑up factor (e.g., 1.15–1.25) before DTI.
- Commission/Tip income: Typically averaged over a look‑back period with stability checks.
- Alimony/Child Support received: Must be documented and likely to continue.
Student Loans & Support Obligations
- Student loans: If no payment is reported, some programs use a small % of balance as a placeholder payment.
- Income‑Driven Repayment (IDR): Underwriting may use the documented IDR payment if it is current and verified.
- Alimony/Child Support paid: Court‑ordered amounts are included as debt in DTI math.
DTI Improvement ROI
Where should the next $100 go to drop DTI the fastest? Target the payment that reduces the required monthly minimum the most.
| Debt | Balance | Min Payment | Paydown | New Min | DTI Delta* |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Credit Card A | $2,000 | $60 | $600 | $40 | −$20 ÷ Income |
| Credit Card B | $800 | $35 | $300 | $20 | −$15 ÷ Income |
| Auto Loan | $9,500 | $280 | — | $280 | 0 (unless refinanced) |
*DTI Delta is the drop in monthly minimum divided by your monthly income. Example: if income is $5,000, lowering minimums by $20 reduces back‑end DTI by 0.4 percentage points.
Overlays & Approval Stages
- Pre‑qualification: Soft check, estimates only.
- Pre‑approval: Docs reviewed; stronger but still conditional.
- Underwriting: Full verification; lender overlays (internal rules) may tighten ratios.
- Re‑pull timing: Expect a credit refresh near closing; keep balances stable.
Residual Income (VA Concept)
Some programs (like VA) analyze whether enough income remains after fixed expenses and typical living costs. Passing a ratio may not be sufficient if residual income is low.
Example (simplified): Income $6,000 − debts $2,200 − standard allowances $2,900 = $900 residual (must meet a regional/household benchmark).
Audit Your Inputs
- Verify all minimums from statements (not current balances).
- Include taxes/insurance/HOA in housing, if applicable.
- Use consistent monthly income (convert annual → monthly).
- Check for duplicate accounts or closed loans still reporting.
DTI Improvement Plan Template
- List: Income basis + each debt and minimum.
- Target: Pick 1–2 revolving accounts with the highest minimums.
- Act: Pay before statement cut; request a limit increase prudently (no new spending).
- Verify: Re‑run the calculator after statements; update your plan.
Regional & Program Variations
Guidelines are not universal. Expect differences across lenders, states, and programs.
- State & tax differences: Property taxes and insurance can swing housing (front-end) DTI by several points.
- Lender overlays: Some lenders require tighter DTIs for condos, multi-units, or high-LTV loans.
- Manual vs. automated underwriting: AUS approvals may allow higher DTIs than manual reviews with the same profile.
Refinance vs Consolidate: Which Helps DTI?
| Action | Effect on Monthly Minimum | DTI Impact | Watchouts |
|---|---|---|---|
| Refi auto @ lower APR | Often ↓ $10–$30 per $10k | Improves | Longer term may increase total interest |
| Credit card BT offer | Minimum can ↓ if promo terms reduce calc | Improves if minimum falls | Fees; new account hit if fresh line |
| Debt consolidation loan | Single fixed payment (may be ↓) | Improves only if total monthly ↓ | Don’t re-spend on the cards |
| HELOC to pay cards | Payment may drop | Improves | Secures debt to home (risk) |
Decision Rule of Thumb
- Count only changes that reduce the required minimum reported to credit.
- Prefer reversible changes (paydown) before structural ones (new loans), close to underwriting.
- Model the new payment and timing in this calculator before applying.
What Underwriters Document & Verify
| Category | Examples | Typical Docs |
|---|---|---|
| Income (W-2) | Salary, hourly, OT/bonus | Pay stubs, W-2s, VOE, 24-mo avg for OT/bonus |
| Income (1099/self-employed) | Contract, gig, business owners | Tax returns, P&L, bank statements, CPA letter |
| Housing | Mortgage or rent | Mortgage statement, lease, insurance, taxes, HOA |
| Revolving/Installment | Cards, auto, student, personal | Credit report, statements for current minimums |
| Support Obligations | Alimony/child support | Court order, proof of payment/receipt |
| Assets/Reserves | Cash for close & cushions | 2 months full bank statements, retirement statements |
Errors That Artificially Inflate DTI
- Using current balance instead of minimum payment for cards.
- Forgetting HOA or mortgage insurance in PITI estimates.
- Not converting annual/weekly income to a consistent monthly basis.
- Counting subscriptions/utilities as debt (they’re affordability, not DTI).
- Old closed accounts still reporting — request corrections if needed.
Letters of Explanation (LOE)
Short and factual is best. Address who, what, when, why, and how it won’t recur.
To whom it may concern:
On 08/15/2025, my credit card minimum spiked due to a one-time medical expense.
The balance was paid on 09/05/2025 and the new minimum posts on 09/20/2025.
This was a non-recurring event. Documentation attached.
Sincerely, [Name]
When LOEs Help
- Temporary spikes in balances/minimums right before statement cut.
- Explaining gaps in employment or variable income patterns.
- Clarifying authorized-user accounts not paid by you.
Calculator Methodology & Assumptions
- Back-end DTI = (Housing + all other monthly debts) ÷ Monthly income.
- Front-end DTI = Housing only ÷ Monthly income.
- Monthly income basis is chosen by you (monthly gross, monthly net, or annual gross ÷ 12).
- “Pay Off” toggle simulates a future state; only affects DTI if minimums would drop.
- No data leaves your browser; state is saved in local storage for convenience.
Extended Glossary
- AUS: Automated Underwriting System (e.g., DU, LP) used by lenders to assess risk.
- Overlay: A lender’s internal rule that can be stricter than base program guidelines.
- LTV: Loan-to-Value ratio; lower LTV can offset higher DTI in some cases.
- DTI Cushion: Your margin below a target DTI (e.g., aiming for 40% if the cap is ~43%).
- Reserves: Months of mortgage payments saved post-closing; strengthens borderline files.