Your debt-to-income ratio (DTI) is one of the most important numbers in personal finance. Lenders use it to decide whether to approve your mortgage, car loan, or credit application — and on what terms.

What Is Debt-to-Income Ratio?

DTI compares how much you owe each month (debt payments) to how much you earn (gross monthly income).

DTI = (Total monthly debt payments / Gross monthly income) × 100

Example:

  • Monthly debt payments: £1,200 (mortgage, car loan, credit card minimum)
  • Gross monthly income: £4,000
DTI = (£1,200 / £4,000) × 100 = 30%

What Counts as Debt?

Include these monthly payments:

  • Mortgage or rent
  • Car loans
  • Student loans
  • Personal loans
  • Credit card minimum payments
  • Any other loan repayments

Do not include:

  • Utilities (electricity, gas, water)
  • Mobile phone bills
  • Groceries and food
  • Insurance premiums
  • Subscriptions and entertainment

Front-End vs Back-End DTI

Mortgage lenders typically calculate two DTI ratios:

Front-end DTI (housing ratio): Only housing costs.

Front-end DTI = Monthly housing costs / Gross monthly income × 100

Housing costs include: mortgage payment (principal + interest), property taxes, home insurance, HOA fees.

Back-end DTI (total DTI): All monthly debt payments.

Back-end DTI = All monthly debt payments / Gross monthly income × 100

When lenders say "your DTI," they usually mean back-end DTI.

What DTI Do Lenders Want?

DTI RangeAssessmentMortgage eligibility
Below 20%ExcellentEasy approval, best rates
20–29%GoodStrong position
30–36%AcceptableGenerally approved
37–43%Caution zoneMay be approved with strong credit
44–50%HighDifficult to get conventional mortgages
Above 50%Very highMost lenders won't approve

UK mortgage rule of thumb: Most lenders want back-end DTI below 40–45%. Some FCA-regulated lenders have stricter requirements.

US conventional mortgages: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac typically require back-end DTI of 45% or below (sometimes 50% with compensating factors).

Worked Example: Should You Apply for a Mortgage?

Your situation:

  • Gross monthly income: £5,500 (£66,000/year)
  • Current monthly debt: £350 (car loan £220, credit card minimum £130)
  • Proposed mortgage payment: £1,400/month

Current DTI (before mortgage):

350 / 5,500 × 100 = 6.4%

DTI with mortgage:

(350 + 1,400) / 5,500 × 100 = 1,750 / 5,500 × 100 = 31.8%

At 31.8%, you're in a strong position for approval.

How to Improve Your DTI

You can lower your DTI by either reducing debt or increasing income.

Reduce debt:

  • Pay off the smallest debts first (frees up monthly payments quickly)
  • Avoid taking on new debt before applying for a mortgage
  • Pay more than minimums on credit cards
  • Consider consolidating high-interest debt at a lower rate

Increase income:

  • Take on freelance work or part-time income
  • Ask for a pay rise or promotion
  • Include bonus income if you can document it

Don't do this: Opening new credit accounts doesn't help your DTI — and each hard inquiry slightly reduces your credit score.

DTI vs Credit Score

These are related but different. A good credit score doesn't automatically mean a good DTI, and vice versa.

MeasuresAffects
DTIDebt burden relative to incomeLoan approval, loan size
Credit scoreCredit history, payment reliabilityInterest rate offered

A lender looks at both. High credit score + high DTI = declined. Low DTI + poor credit score = declined. You need both in good shape.

DTI When Self-Employed

Self-employed applicants typically need to provide 2–3 years of tax returns. Lenders use your net income (after business expenses), not your revenue — which can significantly affect your DTI calculation.

Tip: If you're planning to buy property and you're self-employed, work with an accountant to ensure your tax returns accurately reflect your income in the years leading up to your application.


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