Showing posts with label How Much Income Do I Need to Qualify for an Kentucky FHA Home Loan?. Show all posts
Showing posts with label How Much Income Do I Need to Qualify for an Kentucky FHA Home Loan?. Show all posts

FHA Ratio Guidelines

FHA Ratio Guidelines



The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) uses ratio guidelines to determine whether potential borrowers can qualify for FHA insurance on their mortgage loans. The FHA program is less concerned with your credit history than it is with your ability to generate enough income to cover all your debt payments, including your new FHA loan.

Total Debt

One of the key numbers in the FHA ratio guidelines is the calculation of your total monthly debt. For purposes of this calculation, the FHA is concerned only with debt that will take you more than 10 months to pay off. Types of debt that fall under the total long-term debt category include car loans, student loans, large credit card balances and your new mortgage payment.

Monthly Income

Another key number related to FHA ratio guidelines is your total monthly income. For FHA purposes, you should always use your pretax, or gross, income. This is the total amount the employer pays you before deducting any taxes or other withholding, not the net amount that you deposit in your checking account.

Mortgage to Income

The first FHA ratio guideline that you must satisfy is to show that your new mortgage payment will not exceed 31 percent of your monthly income. This means that for each $1,000 of monthly income you earn, the FHA will allow you a mortgage payment of $310. Keep in mind that the mortgage payment includes property taxes, dues if you are in a homeowners association, and mortgage and homeowner's insurance premium payments.

Total Debt to Income

The FHA also compares your total monthly payments on all your long-term debt to your gross monthly income. Absent extraordinary circumstances, this ratio should not exceed 43 percent. Again, this means that for each $1,000 of monthly income the FHA will allow you $430 in total long-term debt payments.

Exceptions

According to the FHA Handbook, the FHA will allow some variance from the standard 31 and 43 percent ratio guidelines. There are no hard and fast rules for these variances. Some lenders will allow higher debt-to-income ratios if the borrower has an excellent credit score, a higher than required down payment, or a significant amount of cash reserves or other assets.

About the Author


The Constitution Guru has worked as a writer and editor for "BYU Law Review" and "BYU Journal of Public Law." He is an experienced attorney with a law degree and a B.A. degree in history with an emphasis on U.S. Constitutional history, both earned at Brigham Young University.

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How Much Income Do I Need to Qualify for an Kentucky FHA Home Loan?




How Much Income Do I Need to Qualify for an Kentucky  FHA Home Loan?



“How much income do I need in order to qualify for an Kentucky FHA home loan?” 

That is one of the most popular questions many first time home buyers ask about getting an Kentucky FHA mortgage.



The answer often comes as a surprise. The FHA has no minimum income requirement–there is no dollar amount listed as the baseline for which Kentucky FHA loans are approved. 

What the FHA does require is a history of steady income for at least three years. That FHA requirement should not be misinterpreted–it does not establish a minimum length of employment at any one company. It is intended to set a minimums for steady income rather than attempt to gauge employability or longevity at any one firm.



Kentucky FHA income requirements are often misinterpreted in other ways. Some wrongly assume that some types of employment, however dependable, might not count because of the nature of the work. Seasonal work, for example, might pay over one part of the year only. 

Does it still qualify? If you can show the FHA that the income is steady and dependable–in spite of being non-traditional–it still works for an Kentucky FHA loan application.



For the purposes of applying for the loan, steady income is more important than large income.



Seasonal pay, child support, retirement pension payments, unemployment compensation, VA benefits, military pay, Social Security income, alimony, and rent paid by family all qualify as income sources. Part-time pay, overtime, and bonus pay also count as long as they are steady. Special savings plans-such as those set up by a church or community association – qualify, too. Income type is not as important as income steadiness with the FHA.



Some don’t realize that income sources including disability payments, Social Security pay, child support or alimony, even part-time work or overtime pay all count when applying for an Kentucky FHA mortgage.



Bonuses may also be used, but in the case of overtime and bonus pay, FHA rules are clear. “An earnings trend also must be established and documented for overtime and bonus income. If either type shows a continual decline, the lender must provide a sound rationalization in writing for including the income for borrower qualifying.”



FHA rules also state, “If bonus income varies significantly from year to year, a period of more than two years must be used in calculating the average income.”




The key to all of this is consistency in the rate of pay, the amounts, and for how long.

Joel Lobb
Mortgage Loan Officer

Individual NMLS ID #57916

 

American Mortgage Solutions, Inc.

10602 Timberwood Circle 

Louisville, KY 40223

Company NMLS ID #1364


click here for directions to our office

 

Text/call:      502-905-3708

fax:            502-327-9119
email:          kentuckyloan@gmail.com

 

https://www.mylouisvillekentuckymortgage.com/