EuroCalc

Cos'è Rapporto debito/reddito (DTI)?

Il rapporto debito/reddito misura la quota del reddito mensile lordo destinata al pagamento dei debiti e viene utilizzato dalle banche per valutare la sostenibilità del finanziamento.

DTI captures the borrower's ability to service debt. Lenders distinguish front-end DTI (housing costs only — mortgage, taxes, insurance) from back-end DTI (all debt obligations including credit cards, car loans, student loans).

US conventional mortgages typically cap back-end DTI at 43%; FHA loans allow up to 50%. Swiss banks apply the 'tragbarkeit' rule: total housing cost (interest at a stressed 5%, amortisation, 1% maintenance) must stay below one-third of gross income — a stricter, stress-tested DTI.

Formula
DTI = Monthly Debt Payments ÷ Gross Monthly Income
Esempio

A household earning CHF 12,000 gross per month pays CHF 3,500 in mortgage, CHF 600 car loan and CHF 200 in other debt — back-end DTI is 4,300 ÷ 12,000 = 36%.

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Domande frequenti

What DTI do lenders accept?+

Most US mortgages stop at 43%; Swiss banks at 33% on a stressed-rate basis. Lower is always better for pricing.

Does DTI use gross or net income?+

Gross income, before tax and social charges.

How can I lower DTI?+

Pay down credit cards, refinance high-rate debt, or extend loan terms.