Your debt-to-income ratio (DTI) is one of the most important numbers in your financial life. It determines whether you qualify for a mortgage, what interest rate you’ll get, and how much you can borrow.

What Is a Good DTI Ratio?

DTI Range Rating Mortgage Impact
Under 20% Excellent Best rates, easy approval
20-35% Good Approval likely, competitive rates
36-43% Acceptable Conventional loan limit
44-49% High FHA may approve, limited options
50%+ Very High Difficult to get approved for any mortgage

How to Calculate Your DTI

DTI = (Total Monthly Debt Payments ÷ Gross Monthly Income) × 100

What Counts as Debt

Included in DTI NOT Included in DTI
Mortgage / rent (for housing DTI) Utilities
Car payments Groceries / food
Student loan payments Health insurance
Credit card minimum payments Car insurance
Personal loan payments Cell phone bill
Child support / alimony Subscriptions
Other loan payments 401k contributions

DTI Calculation Examples

Scenario Monthly Debts Gross Income DTI
Young professional $800 (rent + student loan) $5,000 16%
Homeowner with car $2,200 (mortgage + car + cards) $7,500 29%
Family with multiple debts $4,000 (mortgage + cars + student loans) $10,000 40%
Stretched buyer $3,500 (mortgage + debts) $7,000 50%

Front-End vs Back-End DTI

Lenders look at two types of DTI:

Type What It Measures Ideal Limit
Front-end (housing) DTI Housing costs only (mortgage, insurance, taxes) 28% or less
Back-end (total) DTI All debt payments combined 36% or less

The common guideline is the 28/36 rule: spend no more than 28% on housing and 36% on total debt. For more on how this works with your income, see our mortgage affordability calculator.

DTI Requirements by Loan Type

Loan Type Maximum DTI Notes
Conventional 43% (sometimes 50% with compensating factors) Best rates under 36%
FHA 43% standard, up to 50% with strong factors More flexible for lower scores
VA 41% guideline, no hard limit Residual income also considered
USDA 41% Geographic restrictions apply
Jumbo 36-43% Stricter requirements

Average DTI in America

Metric Value
Average American DTI 37%
Median DTI for mortgage applicants 34%
Average DTI for approved mortgages 38%
Applicants denied for high DTI 25% of denials
Average mortgage payment as % of income 27%

How to Lower Your DTI

Strategy Impact Timeframe
Pay off credit cards Reduces monthly minimums 1-12 months
Refinance to lower payment Extends term to lower monthly payment 1-2 months
Increase income (side hustle, raise) Lowers DTI percentage Varies
Pay off car loan Eliminates a large monthly payment Immediate if paid off
Avoid new debt before applying Prevents DTI from increasing Ongoing
Pay off debt strategically Focus on highest monthly payments first 3-12 months

DTI and Your Mortgage Rate

Your DTI directly affects the interest rate you’re offered:

DTI Approximate Rate Impact
Under 30% Best available rates
30-36% +0.00-0.125%
36-43% +0.125-0.375%
43-50% +0.375-0.75% (if approved)

On a 30-year mortgage, even a 0.25% higher rate costs thousands over the life of the loan.

DTI Worked Example: Buying a $400,000 Home

On a $100,000 gross annual income ($8,333/month), here is what the numbers look like:

Item Monthly Amount
Gross monthly income $8,333
Target mortgage (PITI) at 28% front-end $2,333
Existing car payment $450
Existing student loan $300
Credit card minimums $150
Total existing debts $900
New mortgage + existing debts $3,233
Back-end DTI 38.8%

At 38.8% DTI this borrower qualifies for a conventional loan, but the rate may be slightly higher than for someone at 32%. Paying off the car loan first would drop DTI to 32.4% — potentially unlocking better pricing.

How Lenders Verify Income for DTI

DTI is only as accurate as the income figure in the denominator. Lenders verify income using:

Income Type Documentation Required
W-2 employment Two years of W-2s + recent pay stubs
Self-employment Two years of tax returns + profit/loss statement
Rental income Lease agreements + Schedule E (2 years)
Alimony / child support Court order + 6-12 months of payments received
Social Security Award letter + two months of bank statements
Investment income Two years of 1099s (must be consistent)

Lenders use gross income (before taxes), not take-home pay. A $100,000 salary counts as $8,333/month for DTI purposes even though your take-home is much less.

Bottom Line

Your DTI ratio is a critical factor in your financial health — not just for mortgage approval, but as a measure of how stretched your budget is. Aim to keep your total DTI below 36%, and if you’re above 43%, make debt reduction a priority before applying for a mortgage.

For more on debt management, see our guides on debt payoff strategies and the debt-to-income ratio explained.

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

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