What Is a Debt-to-Income Ratio (DTI) and Why It Matters in 2026

Your debt-to-income ratio (DTI) is one of the most important numbers lenders look at when you apply for a mortgage, car loan, or personal loan. It tells them how much of your monthly income already goes toward debt payments. The lower your DTI, the better your chances of getting approved — and at a competitive rate.

What Is DTI?

DTI is calculated by dividing your total monthly debt payments by your gross monthly income (before taxes).

DTI = Total Monthly Debt Payments / Gross Monthly Income

For example: if you earn $5,000 per month and your debt payments total $1,500, your DTI is 30%.

What Counts as Debt Payments?

Lenders typically include:

  • Minimum credit card payments
  • Car loan payments
  • Student loan payments
  • Personal loan payments
  • Any existing mortgage or rent payments (for some calculations)
  • Child support or alimony obligations

They do not count: utilities, groceries, gas, phone bills, or insurance.

Front-End vs. Back-End DTI

Mortgage lenders use two types of DTI:

Front-end DTI (also called the housing ratio) looks only at housing costs — principal, interest, taxes, and insurance (PITI). Most conventional lenders want this below 28%.

Back-end DTI includes all debt payments including the proposed housing payment. Most lenders want this below 36% to 43%. FHA loans may allow up to 50% in some cases.

DTI Thresholds by Loan Type

Loan Type Max Back-End DTI
Conventional mortgage 43% (ideally below 36%)
FHA loan 50% with compensating factors
VA loan 41% (guideline, not hard limit)
Personal loan (varies by lender) 35%–45%
Auto loan 50% (varies widely)

How to Calculate Your DTI

Step 1: Add up all your monthly minimum debt payments.

Example: $300 car loan + $200 student loan + $150 credit card minimums = $650

Step 2: Find your gross monthly income.

Example: $60,000 annual salary / 12 = $5,000 per month

Step 3: Divide debt by income.

$650 / $5,000 = 0.13, or 13% DTI

A 13% DTI is excellent. Lenders would view you as low risk.

What Is a Good DTI Ratio?

  • Below 20%: Excellent. You have significant room to take on new debt.
  • 20%–35%: Good. Most lenders will approve you at competitive rates.
  • 36%–43%: Acceptable but borderline. You may face stricter terms.
  • Above 43%: Risky. Many conventional lenders will decline your application.
  • Above 50%: Very high. Approval is unlikely except for specialized programs.

How to Lower Your DTI

You can improve your DTI in two ways: reduce debt payments or increase income.

Reduce monthly debt obligations

  • Pay off small balances to eliminate those monthly minimums entirely
  • Refinance high-payment loans to lower monthly amounts (though this may extend repayment)
  • Consolidate multiple debts into one lower-payment loan

Increase gross income

  • Take on a part-time job or freelance work
  • Negotiate a raise or pursue a higher-paying role
  • Include all qualifying income sources (rental income, side business, alimony received)

DTI vs. Credit Score

Your credit score and DTI measure different things. Your credit score reflects how reliably you have paid debts in the past. Your DTI shows how much of your current income is already committed to debt. Lenders want both to be strong — a high credit score does not override a dangerously high DTI.

Bottom Line

Know your DTI before applying for any major loan. If it is above 43%, work on paying down debt before you apply for a mortgage. Even a few months of focused debt payoff can move you from a borderline DTI to a strong one — and that difference can mean the difference between being approved and being denied, or between a 6.5% and a 7.5% mortgage rate.