What Is a Good Debt-to-Income Ratio?

Your debt-to-income ratio is one of the two or three numbers that most determines whether a lender approves your loan application and at what interest rate. It is simpler to calculate than your credit score and more actionable — but most people have never thought about it until they are rejected.

The Formula

DTI = Total Monthly Debt Payments ÷ Gross Monthly Income × 100

Gross income is before taxes and deductions. Debt payments include minimum payments on all recurring debts.

Example: $500 car payment + $200 student loans + $150 minimum credit card payment = $850 monthly debt. Gross income $5,000/month. DTI = $850 ÷ $5,000 = 17%.

What Counts as Debt

Lenders count these as monthly debt obligations:

They generally do not count utilities, groceries, insurance premiums, subscriptions, or phone bills.

Front-End vs. Back-End DTI

Mortgage lenders use two DTI calculations simultaneously:

Front-end DTI (housing ratio) — only your housing costs (principal, interest, taxes, insurance) divided by gross income. Lenders prefer this under 28%.

Back-end DTI (total DTI) — all monthly debts including housing divided by gross income. This is the more commonly cited number and the one people mean when they say "DTI."

DTI Thresholds by Loan Type

DTI RangeLender AssessmentLoan Eligibility
Under 36%ExcellentBest rates, easy approval
36%–43%GoodStandard approval, competitive rates
43%–50%MarginalPossible approval, higher rates
Over 50%High riskLikely denial for most loans

Conventional mortgages typically require a back-end DTI of 45% or lower, though lenders may stretch to 50% with strong compensating factors like excellent credit or a large down payment.

FHA loans (US government-backed) allow DTIs up to 57% in some cases, making them accessible for borrowers with heavier existing debt.

Personal loans and auto loans vary widely by lender, but DTIs above 40–45% commonly result in higher interest rates rather than outright denial.

What DTI Does Not Capture

DTI measures how much of your income is spoken for — but it does not capture a few important things:

This is why DTI is one input into a credit decision, not the only one. Your credit score, employment history, loan-to-value ratio, and cash reserves all factor in alongside it.

How to Improve Your DTI Before Applying

There are only two levers: reduce debt payments or increase income. In practice:

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Plan Your Budget to Reduce DTI

Map your monthly income against debt obligations and find where you can pay down fastest.

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