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Debt-to-Income Ratio: 36.0%

$3,000 monthly debt payments on a $100,000 annual income ($8,333/month)

Your DTI Ratio
36.0%
Good
Monthly Income
$8,333
$100,000/year gross
Monthly Debt
$3,000
$36,000/year total

DTI Scale

0-20%
20-36%
36-43%
43-50%
50%+

Manageable debt level. Most conventional lenders consider this acceptable.

What a 36.0% DTI Means for You

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Mortgage Eligibility

With a 36.0% DTI, you likely qualify for conventional mortgages. After accounting for your current debt, you could add up to $583/month in housing costs and still stay under 43%.

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Credit & Loans

A 36.0% DTI is favorable for most credit applications. Personal loans, auto loans, and credit cards should be accessible at competitive rates assuming good credit history.

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Financial Flexibility

After debt payments of $3,000/month, you have $5,333 remaining for taxes, savings, groceries, utilities, transportation, and discretionary spending. Financial advisors recommend keeping at least 50% of gross income available for non-debt expenses.

How to Lower Your DTI

Target DTIReduce Debt ByOr Increase Income To
28% (Excellent)$667/mo$128,572/yr
20% (Ideal)$1,334/mo$180,000/yr

Strategies to reduce your DTI:

Use the debt avalanche method to eliminate high-interest debt first. Consider student loan repayment strategies if applicable. Boost income through side hustles or salary negotiation. Refinance high-interest debt to lower monthly payments.

DTI at Different Debt Levels ($100,000 Income)

Monthly DebtDTI RatioRatingRemaining Income
No debt0.0%Excellent$8,333
$500/mo6.0%Excellent$7,833
$1,000/mo12.0%Excellent$7,333
$1,500/mo18.0%Excellent$6,833
$2,000/mo24.0%Good$6,333
$2,500/mo30.0%Good$5,833
$3,000 ← You36.0%Good$5,333
$4,000/mo48.0%High$4,333
$5,000/mo60.0%Very High$3,333

Compare at Different Income Levels

See how a $3,000/month debt load affects DTI at various income levels:

$30,000
120.0%
$50,000
72.0%
$75,000
48.0%
$100,000
36.0%
$150,000
24.0%
$200,000
18.0%

Typical Monthly Debt Breakdown

Common monthly debt obligations for someone earning $100,000/year:

ExpenseTypical Amount% of Income
Housing (Mortgage/Rent)$2,33328.0%
Car Payment$6678.0%
Student Loans$5006.0%
Credit Cards (Min)$2503.0%
Personal Loans$1672.0%
Total Typical Debt$3,91747.0%

Lender DTI Guidelines

Loan TypeMax Front-EndMax Back-EndYour Status
Conventional28%36%Eligible
Conventional (flexible)31%43%Eligible
FHA31%43%Eligible
FHA (compensating)40%50%Eligible
VAN/A41%Eligible
USDA29%41%Eligible

Frequently Asked Questions

What does a 36.0% debt-to-income ratio mean?

A 36.0% DTI means 36.0 cents of every dollar you earn before taxes goes toward debt payments. With your $100,000 annual income ($8,333/month), your $3,000 in monthly debt payments results in this ratio. Lenders rate this as "Good."

What is a good debt-to-income ratio?

Below 20% is considered excellent, 20-36% is good, 36-43% is fair, and above 43% is high. Most conventional mortgage lenders require a DTI of 43% or less. For the best interest rates and loan terms, aim for 36% or below.

How is DTI calculated?

DTI = (Total Monthly Debt Payments / Gross Monthly Income) x 100. For your situation: ($3,000 / $8,333) x 100 = 36.0%. This includes all recurring debt obligations like mortgage/rent, car loans, student loans, and minimum credit card payments.

What is front-end vs back-end DTI?

Front-end DTI (also called the housing ratio) only includes housing costs like mortgage, property tax, and insurance. Back-end DTI includes all monthly debt obligations. Your 36.0% is your back-end DTI. Lenders typically want front-end DTI below 28% and back-end below 36-43%.

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