Mortgage
Loan: Debt to Income ratio
Debt
to income ratios are the calculations underwriters use to
determine whether a borrower can qualify for a mortgage. They
are used to determine if you have the capacity to repay your
mortgage. There are two calculations. The first or Front Ratio
is your housing expense-to-income ratio. This is to say your
proposed mortgage payment (principle, interest, taxes and
insurance) divided by your gross monthly income. The second
or Back Ratio is your total monthly obligations-to-income
ratio. This is your gross monthly payment including Mortgage
PITI divided by your gross monthly income.
The only tricky
part is understanding what is and is not included in your
total obligations and what can and cannot be included in your
gross monthly income. Below is a list of things to remember
when you are totaling all of your payments and all of your
income. Then you can use the calculators provided here more
efficiently.
Total Monthly Payments
Mortgage
Payment:
Include principle, interest, taxes, and insurance (PITI).
Installment
Accounts:
Do not count installment loans that have less than 9 months
remaining. Except for Freddie Mac loans. They count everything.
Revolving
Accounts:
(Credit Cards) Include the minimum payment on all open accounts.
If the card has a zero balance but the card is still OPEN,
you need to include a minimum payment for it too. The lender
will. SO, … if you have cards with zero balances that
are not being used you should CLOSE them. It will lower your
debt to income and also raise your credit score.
Co-signed
Loans:
You will have to include these also unless you can show twelve
months of cancelled checks from the person that is paying
the loan and the loan must not have any late payments.
Child Support:
Must be included.
Loans from a Previous Marriage: Must be counted if you are
getting a conventional conforming loan. However, If your divorce
papers clearly divide up the liabilities, FHA and non-conforming
loans do not count them.
Do Not
Include:
Utilities, telephone services, auto insurance, or childcare.
(VA loans do include childcare.)
Gross Monthly Income
Overtime:
Overtime cannot be counted unless you have been receiving
it fairly consistently for two years and your employer will
say that it is more than likely to continue into the future.
Bonus:
Follows the same rule as overtime.
Commission:
Normally commission requires a two-year history in order for
it to be used. People changing from a salaried job to a commission
job have tough times getting mortgage loans until they can
show two years in the field. There are no-income verification
loans on the market with slightly higher rates for people
paid by commission.
Self-Employed:
You must be self-employed for two years. Your usable income
for a loan is the bottom line on your federal tax return AFTER
all the deductions. There are things you can add back such
as depreciation but to be perfectly honest, most self employed
people have difficulty achieving the required monthly gross
income because of all the tax write offs. Again, that is why
it is so wonderful that there are non-conforming loans that
allow higher debt to income ratios and no-income verification
programs.
Child support:
You can use child support if you can prove that you will receive
it for an additional two years and you can prove that it has
been paid on time for the last year. The only acceptable proof
of payment is cancelled checks or a print out from the court
if it is being paid through the court system.
Required Ratios
Conventional Loans:
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac allow a maximum of 28% for the
front ratio and 36% for the back ratio. (28/36)
Non-Conventional:
FHA allows 29/41 and VA only uses the back ratio of 41% as
a guideline. VA also calculates what they call Adequacy Of
Effective Income and Balance Remaining for Family Support.
This is a very complicated worksheet so I won't go into it
here. Ask your Loan Officer or give me a call for more details.
Non-Conforming
Loans:
This term simply means they do not conform to the rigid, strict
guidelines of conventional loans. Thank goodness! These loans
usually only use the back ratio and I have seen them go as
high as 55%.
Now you have all
the information you need to get more accurate results from
the calculators I have included for you on this site.
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