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DTI Calculator

Calculate your debt-to-income ratio and assess your financial health

Monthly Income

Enter your gross monthly income before taxes and deductions

Monthly Debt Payments

Mortgage/Rent

Monthly housing payment

Credit Cards

Minimum credit card payments

Auto Loan

Car loan payment

Student Loans

Student loan payments

Personal Loans

Personal loan payments

Other Debt

Other recurring debt payments

$2,150
Total Monthly Debt Payments

Your DTI Analysis

43.0%
Debt-to-Income Ratio
Dangerous

High debt levels indicate financial stress. Immediate action needed.

Front-End Ratio

24.0%

Housing payment only (ideal: ≤28%)

✓ Acceptable

Back-End Ratio

43.0%

All debt payments (ideal: ≤36%)

✗ Too High

Mortgage Qualification

Conventional Mortgage (≤36% DTI)
FHA Mortgage (≤43% DTI)

Recommendation

Your debt levels are dangerous. Devote as much money and energy as possible to repaying loans.

Debt Capacity Analysis

Enter your target or lender's maximum acceptable DTI percentage

$1,800
Maximum Allowed Debt
$2,150
Current Debt
$0
Additional Capacity
Debt Utilization119.4%

Debt Breakdown

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DTI Guidelines

< 20%: Excellent

Outstanding financial flexibility

20-36%: Healthy

Good management, be cautious with new debt

37-42%: Troubling

Focus on debt reduction

43-49%: Dangerous

Immediate action needed

> 50%: Critical

Seek professional help

Mortgage Standards

28/36 Rule

  • • Housing costs ≤ 28% of gross income
  • • Total debt ≤ 36% of gross income

FHA Loans

  • • More flexible: up to 43% DTI
  • • Lower down payment requirements

Improvement Tips

  • • Pay down high-interest debt first
  • • Increase income through side work
  • • Avoid taking on new debt
  • • Consider debt consolidation

Understanding Debt-to-Income Ratio

What is DTI?

The debt-to-income ratio (DTI) measures how much of your monthly income goes toward paying debts. It's calculated by dividing your total monthly debt payments by your gross monthly income and multiplying by 100.

Formula

DTI = (Total Monthly Debt / Gross Monthly Income) × 100

Why It Matters

  • Lenders use DTI to assess loan eligibility
  • Helps you understand your financial health
  • Guides decisions about taking on new debt
  • Critical for mortgage qualification

What Counts as Debt?

Include:

  • • Mortgage or rent payments
  • • Credit card minimum payments
  • • Auto loan payments
  • • Student loan payments
  • • Personal loan payments
  • • Child support/alimony

Don't Include:

  • • Utilities (unless past due)
  • • Insurance premiums
  • • Groceries and living expenses
  • • Taxes
  • • Savings contributions
Step 1

Calculate Income

Use gross monthly income before taxes

Step 2

Sum All Debts

Add up all monthly debt payments

Step 3

Calculate Ratio

Divide debt by income and multiply by 100

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