Kalkulator ng Ratio ng Utang sa Kita – Suriin ang DTI
Your debt-to-income (DTI) ratio is the single most important number lenders look at when evaluating loan applications. Calculate yours instantly and see whether you qualify for a mortgage, personal loan, or other credit.
Paano gamitin ang calculator na ito
- Ilagay ang Monthly Gross Income (₱)
- Ilagay ang Mortgage/Rent Payment (₱)
- Ilagay ang Car Loan Payments (₱)
- Ilagay ang Student Loan Payments (₱)
- Ilagay ang Minimum Credit Card Payments (₱)
- I-click ang Kalkulahin na buton
- Basahin ang resultang ipinapakita sa ibaba ng calculator
What Is Debt-to-Income Ratio?
Debt-to-income (DTI) ratio is the percentage of your gross monthly income that goes toward debt payments. It's calculated as: DTI = (Total Monthly Debt Payments ÷ Gross Monthly Income) × 100.
Example: Monthly debts of ₱112,000 ÷ Monthly income of ₱336,000 = 33.3% DTI.
Lenders use DTI as a measure of your ability to manage additional debt. A lower DTI signals financial health and lower default risk. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) considers 43% DTI the maximum for most qualified mortgages.
There are two versions: Front-end DTI includes only housing costs; back-end DTI includes all recurring debt payments. Lenders typically look at both.
DTI Ranges and What They Mean
| DTI Range | Rating | Lender Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Below 20% | Excellent | Strong financial position, best rates available |
| 20% – 35% | Good | Manageable debt load, good loan approval odds |
| 36% – 43% | Acceptable | Borderline for some lenders, may face higher rates |
| 44% – 50% | High | Difficult to qualify for most loans |
| Above 50% | Very High | Loan approval very unlikely, financial stress likely |
Note: These ranges are general guidelines. Individual lenders may have stricter or more flexible requirements. FHA loans allow back-end DTI up to 57% in some cases; conventional loans typically cap at 45–50%.
DTI Requirements by Loan Type
Different loan programs have different DTI thresholds:
- Conventional loans (Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac): Maximum 45% DTI (can go to 50% with compensating factors like high credit score)
- FHA loans: Maximum 43% DTI typically; up to 57% with strong compensating factors
- VA loans: No official maximum DTI, but 41% is a benchmark. Higher DTI allowed with residual income analysis
- USDA loans: Maximum 41% back-end DTI for most borrowers
- Jumbo loans: Stricter requirements — typically 43% maximum, often 36–38%
- Personal loans: Varies widely by lender; many prefer below 36%
How to Lower Your DTI Ratio
Two ways to improve DTI: reduce debt payments or increase income. Here's how:
Reduce debts:
- Pay off small balances first (debt snowball) to eliminate minimum payments
- Refinance high-rate debt at lower rates to reduce monthly payments
- Avoid taking on new credit before applying for a major loan
- Don't close old credit card accounts (hurts credit score, not DTI directly)
Increase income:
- Add a part-time job, freelance income, or rental income
- Negotiate a salary increase — even ₱16,800/month extra income reduces DTI by ~5% on a ₱336,000 income base
- Include all qualifying income: alimony, child support, Social Security, disability, investment income
Pro tip: Paying off a ₱11,200/month minimum payment eliminates that entire amount from your DTI calculation — more impactful than reducing a ₱56,000 payment to ₱44,800.
Front-End vs Back-End DTI for Mortgages
Mortgage lenders specifically look at two ratios:
Front-end DTI (housing ratio): (Monthly housing costs ÷ Gross income) × 100. Housing costs include: principal + interest + property taxes + homeowner's insurance + HOA fees + PMI. Most lenders want front-end DTI below 28–31%.
Back-end DTI (total DTI): (All monthly debt payments + housing costs ÷ Gross income) × 100. This is the number most lenders focus on.
Example: Income ₱448,000/month. Proposed mortgage PITI = ₱112,000. Other debts = ₱33,600. Front-end = 2,000/8,000 = 25%. Back-end = 2,600/8,000 = 32.5%. Both qualify for conventional financing.
DTI and Credit Score: The Loan Approval Matrix
Lenders evaluate DTI alongside credit score. A strong credit score can compensate for a higher DTI:
| Credit Score | Max DTI (Conventional) | Approval Likelihood |
|---|---|---|
| 760+ | 50% | Excellent |
| 720–759 | 45% | Good |
| 680–719 | 43% | Fair |
| 640–679 | 40% | Challenging |
| Below 640 | 36% | Difficult |
What Counts (and Doesn't Count) in DTI
Included in DTI calculation:
- Mortgage or rent payments (proposed or current)
- Car loan and lease payments
- Student loan payments (minimum, or 0.5–1% of balance if in deferment)
- Credit card minimum payments
- Personal loan payments
- Child support and alimony obligations
NOT included in DTI:
- Utilities (electricity, gas, water, internet)
- Groceries and food expenses
- Insurance premiums (health, auto, life)
- Subscription services
- Taxes (already accounted for by using gross income)
Huling na-update: March 2026
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good debt-to-income ratio?
A DTI below 36% is generally considered good. Below 20% is excellent and indicates strong financial health. For mortgage qualification, most lenders prefer back-end DTI below 43–45%.
What DTI do I need for a mortgage?
For most conventional mortgages, you need a back-end DTI below 45–50%. FHA loans may allow up to 57% with compensating factors. Lower DTI significantly improves your interest rate and loan terms.
Does DTI affect my credit score?
No, DTI is not directly included in credit score calculations. However, factors that affect DTI (credit card balances, loan amounts) do affect your credit score through credit utilization and payment history.
How do lenders verify income for DTI?
Lenders verify income through W-2s, pay stubs (recent 30 days), tax returns (typically 2 years), and bank statements. Self-employed borrowers typically provide 2 years of tax returns and profit/loss statements.
Do student loans in deferment count toward DTI?
Yes. Even in deferment or forbearance, student loans count toward DTI. Fannie Mae requires lenders to use 1% of the outstanding balance if no payment is required; FHA uses 0.5%; some lenders use the fully-amortized payment.
Can I get a mortgage with 50% DTI?
Possibly, with FHA financing and strong compensating factors (high credit score, large down payment, significant cash reserves). Conventional loans cap at 50% DTI with excellent credit (760+). Rates and terms will be less favorable.
Does rent count as debt in DTI?
Current rent counts as a debt payment in DTI calculations. When applying for a mortgage, lenders include your proposed new mortgage payment (not current rent) in the front-end DTI calculation.
How quickly can I improve my DTI?
You can improve DTI quickly by paying off small debts entirely (eliminating minimum payments) or by increasing income. Getting a raise or taking on a side job that adds ₱28,000/month to income can lower DTI by 5–8% depending on your debt load.
What's the difference between DTI and credit utilization?
DTI compares monthly debt payments to monthly income. Credit utilization compares total credit card balances to credit limits. Both affect borrowing ability, but DTI is the primary mortgage qualifier while credit utilization is a key credit score factor.
Should I pay off debt or save for a down payment?
It depends on your DTI and interest rates. If your DTI is above 43%, paying off debt may be more valuable for loan qualification. If DTI is already below 36% and down payment is the limiting factor, saving may be better. High-interest debt (above 6%) is almost always worth paying off first.
"Your debt-to-income ratio is all your monthly debt payments divided by your gross monthly income. Lenders generally look for a DTI of 43% or lower for qualified mortgages, while a DTI below 36% is considered a healthy level for overall financial wellbeing."