Calculating your debt ratio is pretty simple. It’s nice to know it because if you’re buying a home, or plan to in the near future, you can roughly figure out how much a potetnial lender will be willing to let you borrow.
Your debt ratio is represented as two numbers, based on your gorss montly income. The two numbers consist of your housing ratio which is your housing payments that include tax and insurance costs, which is also known as the front end. The back end would be your second ratio also known as your total debt. This is calculated by your housing ratio added with your debt on bills and credit reports divided by your gross monthly income.
An example would be of a loan with 5% down and some common front and back end ratios would be 28 and 36. Your gross monthly income is 5,000 dollars which is what you make before taxes and any witholding that might concur. We will use the housing ratio of 28% and thus 28% of our gross monthly income will be $1,400. You subtract various things that are considered your “allowables” which can be insurance bill and monthly tax payments. So for this example we will be left with $1,115 for our principal payment and interest payment. For a 30 year fixed payment with a 7% rate, the loan amount will calculate to roughly 168,000. This is what you’re preqaulified for, so expect to get atleast this much when you’re seeing your lender.
To calculate your back end ratio, it shows items that are on your credit reposts such as any loans, such as car, and student, and credit card payments. Lets say that for all our loans and payments combined equal $650, our debt would be the $1,400 plus the $650 which would give us $2,050. When we divide this by our gross monthly income, we get roughly 41% which would make our ratio 28 to 41, for front and back end ratios respectively.
As said earlier, you may be preqaulified for a loan of $168,000, this isn’t necessarily a bad thing. This does not limit your home to one that cost within that range, you can still afford a house that may cost double or even ten times that, but then you’re going to need the rest as a down payment. So, it may not be realistic, but be aware that your options are not limited.












