New FHA Rules Hamper Mortgages For Student-Loan Borrowers

The Federal Housing Administration recently made it more difficult for first-time homebuyers with outstanding student loans to get low down payment mortgages.
The Federal Housing Administration recently made it more difficult for mortgage applicants with outstanding student loans to get low downpayment mortgages.. Photo by karamysh/Shutterstock.

WASHINGTON, Sept. 19 (UPI) — The Federal Housing Administration just made it more difficult for first-time homebuyers with outstanding student loans to get low down payment mortgages with changes to the crucial debt-to-income calculation.

The FHA now requires 2 percent of the applicant’s outstanding student debt balance to be calculated as part of the DTI ratio — even if the loans are in deferment. That means FHA lenders must count projected repayment amounts into the borrower’s DTI ratio. Too high of a ratio, usually higher than 43 to 45 percent, is considered a bigger risk for defaulting on the mortgage.

Up until the rules changed on Sept. 14, student loans that were in deferment for at least a year were excluded from the DTI calculations.

The new rules stand to affect millions of millennials and first-time homebuyers. Some 43 million people, most under age 40, owe an estimated $1.2 trillion in outstanding student loan debt. The average balance is about $30,000.

That means a borrower with $30,000 in student loan debt will have a monthly $600 repayment obligation, chipping away at the borrower’s DTI ratio.

Brian Sullivan, an FHA spokesman, said the change is a way to put first-time homebuyers “on a path of sustainable homeownership rather than being placed into a financial situation they can no longer afford once their student debt deferment expires.”

“Deferred student debt is debt all the same and really must be counted when determining a borrower’s ability to sustain both student debt payments and a mortgage over the long haul,” he said.1414

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