How much home can you afford - before underwriting says “no”?
This calculator estimates your affordability range using DTI, monthly debts, down payment, and interest rate – so you can set realistic targets before you shop. When the numbers look right, the real next step is qualification: verify income, produce an underwriter-ready worksheet, and reduce conditions on the path to clear-to-close.
❓Understanding Debt-to-Income Ratios (DTI)❓
Understanding Debt-to-Income Ratios (DTI)
Your debt-to-income ratio (DTI) is one of the most important numbers in mortgage underwriting. It shows how much of your gross monthly income goes toward paying debts – and it directly influences mortgage affordability and whether a lender will approve your loan.
A good mortgage affordability calculator uses DTI to estimate a realistic budget before you fall in love with a home.
Front-End vs. Back-End DTI
Lenders typically review two DTI ratios:
Front-end DTI (housing ratio)
This looks only at housing costs – your mortgage payment (principal & interest) plus estimated property taxes, homeowners insurance, and sometimes HOA – as a percentage of gross monthly income. Many lenders prefer this around 28%.
Back-end DTI (total debt ratio)
This includes everything in front-end DTI plus all recurring monthly debts: auto loans, student loans, credit card minimum payments, personal loans, and other obligations. A common benchmark is 36%, while some programs may allow 43% or even 50% depending on the borrower profile and loan type.
The key takeaway: back-end DTI is usually the main affordability limiter, because it reflects your full monthly obligations.
How DTI Changes Your Mortgage Options
DTI doesn’t just impact the maximum home price – it can affect:
your interest rate
which loan programs you qualify for
whether you’ll face extra conditions during underwriting
In general:
Lower DTI often unlocks more options and better pricing.
36% to 43% back-end DTI may still work, but underwriting can become more sensitive (rate/conditions/reserve requirements).
Above 43% your options can narrow, though some programs may still be possible with strong compensating factors such as excellent credit, significant reserves, or a larger down payment.
Comfortable vs. Maximum Affordability
A lender’s maximum approval amount is not always a comfortable monthly payment. The “max” number can leave little room for:
savings and retirement contributions
unexpected home repairs
lifestyle spending
rate changes or insurance increases
A safer approach is to target a comfortable DTI (often near the classic 28/36 framework) so your housing costs don’t dominate your cash flow.
How to Improve Your Affordability
If the calculator’s result is lower than you expected, you still have levers:
Reduce monthly debts
Paying down existing obligations improves back-end DTI immediately.Increase your down payment
A bigger down payment reduces the loan amount and can lower your monthly payment – and may eliminate PMI depending on structure.Improve your credit score
Better credit often means a better interest rate, which can significantly increase the home price you can afford at the same monthly budget.Adjust the loan term
A longer term typically reduces monthly payment (but increases total interest paid). Use this strategically.Review programs and structure
Some buyers can benefit from first-time buyer programs, down payment assistance, or alternative mortgage structures – depending on eligibility.
Beyond DTI: What Underwriting Really Looks At
DTI is critical, but mortgage approval is a full-picture decision. Underwriting also evaluates:
employment and income stability
income documentation quality
credit history
assets and reserves
property type and loan program rules
That’s why the home price is only step one. Plan for closing costs (often 2%–5% of purchase price), moving expenses, and an emergency fund for ongoing maintenance.
Rapidio Note: DTI Is Only as Accurate as the Income Calculation
Most DTI issues happen when income is miscalculated or inconsistently documented. If you want a faster path from “estimate” to underwriting-ready, Rapidio helps teams produce an underwriter-ready income worksheet in minutes – reducing rework, conditions, and delays to clear-to-close.