How Your Monthly Debt Is Reducing Your Home Buying Power More Than You Realize

May 07, 20263 min read

How Your Monthly Debt Is Reducing Your Home Buying Power More Than You Realize

The Number That Drives Your Mortgage More Than Income

Most buyers focus on income when they start thinking about what they can afford. Income matters but it is only half of the equation. The other half is monthly debt and for a significant number of buyers it is the variable that is quietly limiting how much home they can actually buy.

When you apply for a mortgage lenders do not just look at what you earn. They look at the relationship between what you earn and what you already owe every month. That relationship is called your debt-to-income ratio and it is one of the primary factors that determines your loan approval amount.

What Gets Counted and How Much It Costs You

Car payments, student loans, credit card minimum payments, personal loans, and other monthly debt obligations all factor into your debt-to-income calculation. The impact of each dollar of monthly debt on your buying power is more significant than most buyers anticipate.

As Matt Brady explains for approximately every $450 in monthly debt you lose roughly $75,000 in buying power. That is not a small number. A single car payment of $450 per month does not just cost you $450 a month. It costs you $75,000 in the price range you can qualify for. Two car payments, a student loan minimum, and a credit card balance can together reduce your buying power by $150,000 to $200,000 or more before you ever walk into a home.

That is why two people with identical incomes can qualify for dramatically different home prices depending on what their monthly debt picture looks like.

Not All Debt Is Treated the Same

There is some nuance in how different types of debt are evaluated and it is worth understanding before you assume every obligation on your credit report will be counted in full.

Some debt can be excluded from the calculation depending on the loan type, the timeline of the obligation, and in some cases who is making the payments. A debt with fewer than a certain number of remaining payments may not count. A debt being paid by someone else with documentation may be excludable. The specifics depend on the loan program and the lender guidelines that apply to your situation.

What does not change is the fundamental reality that most monthly debt obligations count and their cumulative impact on buying power is real and significant.

Why Understanding This Before You Start House Hunting Matters

Buyers who start the home search without a clear picture of how their debt affects their qualifying amount frequently run into one of two problems. They fall in love with homes that are outside their actual price range and face disappointment when the numbers do not work. Or they qualify for less than expected and feel blindsided at a point in the process when making adjustments is difficult.

Understanding your debt-to-income picture before you start looking gives you an accurate budget to work with from the beginning. It also creates an opportunity to evaluate whether paying down specific debts before applying could meaningfully improve your qualifying amount and whether that tradeoff makes sense for your situation.

Matt Brady works with buyers to look at the full picture of their numbers before the home search begins so there are no surprises and no missed opportunities. Reach out to Matt Brady to find out exactly where you stand and what your buying power actually looks like right now.


Sources

ConsumerFinancialProtectionBureau.gov FannieMae.com Investopedia.com MortgageNewsDaily.com BankRate.com

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