📊 Am I Normal?
📊

💰 Money

Is my debt level normal?

Compare your debt-to-income ratio to national benchmarks.

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Mortgage + car + student loans + credit cards + other

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Is my debt-to-income ratio normal?

Your debt-to-income (DTI) ratio is one of the most important numbers in personal finance. It's what lenders look at to decide if you can afford more debt — and it's a key indicator of financial stress.

DTI benchmarks (Federal Reserve + lending guidelines)

  • Under 20%: Excellent — low risk, easy loan approval
  • 20–35%: Healthy — manageable debt level
  • 36–43%: Elevated — approaching the limit for most mortgages
  • 43–50%: High — difficult to get approved for new credit
  • 50%+: Critical — financial distress territory

Average DTI by age (Fed SCF 2022)

  • Under 35: Average DTI 22% — student loans + rent
  • 35–44: Average DTI 25% — mortgage peak years
  • 45–54: Average DTI 20% — mortgage paydown phase
  • 55–64: Average DTI 16% — approaching retirement
  • 65+: Average DTI 12% — most debt paid off

The 43% threshold is critical — it's the maximum DTI most conventional mortgage lenders will accept (Qualified Mortgage rule).