Friday, March 1, 2013

How Monthly Liabilities Apply


Using the example from two days ago, let’s say you’re trying to decide how much house payment you can afford coupled with other monthly obligations: A vehicle payment for $300 per month & $80 per month in credit card payments. Assuming our example income of $5,638 per month, in order to purchase that same house for $350,000, the monthly income would have to be $6482 per month adjusting for total monthly liabilities (determined house payment + other debts) ÷ monthly income. The other choice is to reduce the purchase price to $300,000, with effectively $380 per month in other debts, which influences borrowing power by $50,000.

*Mortgage Tip: take 45% of your monthly income less monthly liabilities. This is the maximum house payment you can qualify for, then simply equate what the monthly payment is relative to how much you can borrow based upon using $725 per month for every $100,000.

1 comment:

  1. Great Post... I'm glad to have found this place, as I'm in the process of getting a mortgage on an investment property now. Great stuff and keep writing

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