Learn what the front-end DTI ratio measures, what counts as housing cost, and why mortgage lenders use it alongside back-end DTI and LTV.
The front-end debt-to-income (DTI) ratio measures how much of a borrower’s gross monthly income would go toward housing costs alone.
It is the housing-affordability side of underwriting. While the broader back-end DTI looks at all recurring debt, the front-end version focuses only on the monthly housing burden.
Monthly housing costs often include:
mortgage principal and interest
property taxes
homeowners insurance
association dues when relevant
Suppose a borrower has:
mortgage payment: $1,650
property taxes and insurance: $350
HOA dues: $100
gross monthly income: $7,000
Then:
The front-end DTI is 30%.
Mortgage lenders want to know whether the borrower can realistically carry the housing payment before even layering in car loans, student debt, and other obligations.
That is why front-end DTI is useful for:
screening housing affordability
comparing loan structures
deciding whether the proposed payment is stretching the borrower too far
The difference is simple but important:
front-end DTI = housing costs only
back-end DTI = housing costs plus other recurring monthly debt
A borrower can look acceptable on the front-end ratio but still fail the broader affordability test once other debt is included.
This ratio is useful, but incomplete.
It does not directly tell the lender:
how much other debt the borrower carries
whether the borrower has strong reserves
whether the property has a safe collateral cushion
That is why it is usually read alongside the debt-to-income (DTI) ratio, the loan-to-value (LTV) ratio, and the credit score.
Front-end DTI helps borrowers estimate whether a target home price is realistic before they apply. It can reveal early whether they need to:
lower the target payment
increase the down payment
reduce other costs
wait for income to improve
Debt-to-Income (DTI) Ratio: The broader affordability measure that includes other debt obligations.
Mortgage: The main loan where front-end DTI is commonly used.
Loan-to-Value (LTV) Ratio: Measures collateral protection rather than income affordability.
Refinancing: Can change housing cost and therefore front-end DTI.
Credit Score: Another key underwriting input beside DTI.