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ToolGrym

Debt-to-Income Ratio Calculator

Calculate your debt-to-income ratio exactly the way lenders do — front-end and back-end — and see where you stand against the 28%, 36%, and 43% thresholds that decide loan approvals.

Written by Daniel Mercer, CFP® · Reviewed by Sarah Lindqvist, CFA

Last reviewed:

$

Before taxes and deductions

$

Rent, or mortgage + property tax + insurance + HOA

$

Car loans, student loans, credit card minimums, personal loans

Debt-to-income ratio (back-end)

35%

Good — within conventional lending limits

Front-end (housing only)
25%
Total monthly debt
$2,100
Gross monthly income
$6,000
Room before the 36% guideline
$60
HousingOther debtRemaining income

What this calculator does

Before any lender looks at your credit score’s three digits, they compute two percentages from your income and debts. This calculator produces both — the front-end (housing) ratio and the back-end (total debt) ratio — rates the result against standard lending thresholds, and shows the dollar amount of headroom you have before hitting the 36% guideline. The income bar underneath makes the split visceral: housing, other debt, and what’s left of your month.

How the math works

No exponents, just division that must be set up correctly:

Front-end DTI = housing costs ÷ gross monthly income × 100

Back-end DTI = (housing costs + other debt payments) ÷ gross monthly income × 100

The subtleties are in the definitions: gross income (pre-tax), and debt payments meaning contractual monthly obligations — not balances, not living expenses. A $20,000 card balance with a $400 minimum contributes $400 to the numerator, exactly like a $400 car payment on a $9,000 loan.

A worked example

Gross income $6,000/month, housing $1,500, other debts $600:

  • Front-end: 1,500 ÷ 6,000 = 25% — under the 28% guideline
  • Back-end: 2,100 ÷ 6,000 = 35% — under 36%, rated “good”
  • Headroom: 36% × 6,000 − 2,100 = $60/month before crossing the guideline

That last number is the revealing one: this borrower qualifies, but a single new $250/month car payment pushes them to 39% — past conventional comfort, into the zone where rates worsen and options narrow. DTI isn’t a pass/fail test; it’s a budget speedometer, and this household is closer to the limit than the “good” label suggests.

Practical tips

  1. Check your DTI before lenders do. Running this calculator before a mortgage or auto application shows you the number underwriters will see — and whether paying off one small debt first would move you into a better bracket.
  2. Kill payments, not just balances. For DTI purposes, a debt counts until it’s gone. If you have $3,000 spare, eliminating a $3,000 loan with a $180 payment improves DTI immediately; putting $3,000 against a $20,000 loan changes nothing this year.
  3. Mind the escrow items. For a mortgage application, housing cost means full PITI — principal, interest, taxes, insurance, plus HOA. Using just principal and interest understates your front-end ratio and sets up a bad surprise.
  4. Use gross for lenders, net for yourself. Qualify with the gross-income math, then rerun the same debts against take-home pay. If debts eat more than a third of your net income, the loan may be approvable and still unwise.

The number behind the other numbers

DTI is the connective tissue between ToolGrym’s lending tools: the mortgage affordability calculator is DTI run in reverse (starting from the thresholds and solving for the house), and every payoff tool — credit card, debt snowball — is a machine for shrinking the numerator. If your ratio is high, those pages are the exit route; if it’s low, you’ve earned negotiating leverage on your next loan.

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between front-end and back-end DTI?
Front-end counts housing costs only (rent, or mortgage principal, interest, taxes, insurance, and HOA) divided by gross monthly income. Back-end adds every other monthly debt obligation — car loans, student loans, personal loans, card minimums. Lenders quote both, but the back-end number usually decides approval.
What DTI do I need for a mortgage?
Conventional guidelines historically favor 28% front-end and 36% back-end. The federal qualified-mortgage framework treats 43% back-end as a key threshold, and loans above it face more scrutiny. Government-backed programs (FHA, VA) sometimes approve higher with compensating factors — but a lower DTI always means better pricing and more lender competition for your business.
Is gross or take-home income used?
Gross — before taxes and deductions. That surprises people, because it makes DTI look rosier than your lived budget: a 36% DTI on gross income can consume half of take-home pay. Lenders use gross for consistency; you should sanity-check the same debts against your net income for a truthful picture of your month.
What debts do NOT count in DTI?
Utilities, groceries, phone plans, insurance premiums (except those escrowed in housing costs), subscriptions, childcare, and taxes. DTI counts credit obligations, not living expenses. This is exactly why a "qualifying" DTI isn't proof of affordability — two households with identical DTIs can have wildly different real budgets.
How do I lower my DTI fastest?
Two levers: shrink the numerator or grow the denominator. Paying off a small loan entirely removes its whole payment from the calculation (unlike paying down a large balance, which changes nothing until it's gone). On the income side, documented raises, bonuses, or a second income stream raise the denominator — lenders typically want a two-year history for variable income.

Written by

Daniel Mercer, CFP®

Daniel is a Certified Financial Planner™ with 12 years of experience helping households manage debt, savings, and retirement planning. He writes ToolGrym’s calculator guides and explains the math behind every tool.

Reviewed by

Sarah Lindqvist, CFA

Sarah is a CFA charterholder who reviews every ToolGrym calculator and article for mathematical accuracy. She has 10 years of experience in fixed-income analytics and consumer lending models.