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Dear
Dr. Don,
My husband and I are moving from an affordable
suburb to an expensive city. We also have two car payments,
which limits our borrowing power. According to Bankrate's calculators,
we could borrow more if we only had one car payment. Should
we use some of the proceeds from selling our home to pay off
a car loan in order to borrow more for a house?
-- Jennifer Joist
Dear
Jennifer,
Besides reviewing your credit, a mortgage lender is going
to look at your income, too. Lenders use loan underwriting
standards to ensure that loans meet established parameters
for risk. Two key financial ratios in underwriting are the
front-end and back-end ratios. Deciding to pay off one of
the car loans has an impact on both of these ratios.
The front-end ratio, or front ratio, looks at
your monthly housing expenses as a percentage of your monthly
before-tax income. Most lenders require that the front-end
ratio not exceed 28 percent of that monthly income number.
Bankrate's glossary
of mortgage terms defines the back-end ratio or back ratio
as:
The sum of the house payment and all other monthly debt
-- credit cards, car payments, student loans and the like
-- divided by before-tax income. Traditionally, lenders
were loath to extend borrowers' back-end ratios past 36
percent, but they often do now.
Paying off a car with equity from your current
home will free up room in your back-end ratio but increase
your front-end ratio because you'll have less money to use
as a down payment. A smaller down payment means a higher mortgage
payment.
Since $10,000 paid back over 30 years in a mortgage
is a smaller monthly nut than $10,000 paid back over five
years as a car payment, you free up more debt capacity by
paying off the car than you do by putting that money toward
the down payment. The table shows how each contributes to
the ratios in this hypothetical example. You can make your
own table by using the mortgage
calculator on Bankrate, figuring what the monthly mortgage
payment would be on the outstanding loan balance on your car.
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Mortgage
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Auto loan
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Loan amount:
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$10,000
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$10,000
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Interest rate:
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6%
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6%
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Loan term (months):
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360
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48
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Payment:
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$(59.96)
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$ (234.85)
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Monthly income:
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$6,000
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$6,000
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Payment as % of monthly
income:
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1.00%
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3.91%
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There are other considerations. For example,
a smaller down payment can mean that you will pay private
mortgage insurance -- at least in the early years of the mortgage.
-- Posted: Sept. 15, 2004
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