• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Kathy Lynch Homes

Kathy Lynch Homes

Newest Design from Michael Tritthart Team

  • Home
  • Search
  • Communities
    • Cary
    • Apex
    • Raleigh
    • Holly Springs
    • Fuquay Varina
    • Wake Forest
    • Durham
  • Sellers
    • 8 Steps to Selling a Home
    • Practicing Good Seller’s Etiquette
    • Sell and Make a Profit
    • Staging Tips
    • Seller Video Tips
  • Buyers
    • 8 Steps to Buying a Home
    • Deciding How Much House You Can Afford
    • Location, Location, Location
    • Home Buying Tips
    • Buyer Video Tips
  • About
    • Client Reviews
    • Blog

Deciding How Much House You Can Afford

Your lender decides what you can borrow but you decide what you can afford.

Lenders are careful, but they make qualification decisions based on averages and formulas. They won’t understand the nuances of your lifestyle and spending patterns quite as well as you do. So, leave a little room for the unexpected – for all the new opportunities your home will give you to spend money, from furnishings, to landscaping, to repairs.

Historically, banks use a ratio called 28/36 to decide how much borrowers could borrow. An approved housing payment couldn’t be more than 28 percent of the buyer’s gross monthly income, and his or her total debt load, including car payments, student loans, and credit card payments, couldn’t be more than 36 percent. (In Canada lenders apply similar formulas to determine how much a buyer can afford. The Gross Debt Service ratio, or GDS, is not to exceed 32 percent of the buyer’s gross monthly income, and the Total Debt Service ratio, or TDS, is not to exceed 40 percent of the buyer’s total debt load.) As home prices have risen, some lenders have responded by stretching these ratios to as high as 50 percent. No matter how expensive your market though, we urge you to think carefully before stretching your budget quite so much.

Deciding how much you can afford should involve some careful attention to how your financial profile will change in the upcoming years. In the long run, your own peace of mind and security will matter most.

Footer

  • Home
  • Communities
  • Buyers
  • Sellers
  • About
  • Blog
Kathy Lynch - Keller Williams Realty

(919) 210-2709 | Email Me
525 New Waverly Place Suite 202
Cary, North Carolina 27518


Handcrafted with by Michael Tritthart Team. | Privacy Policy.