Debt-to-Income Ratio Calculator in Minnesota

Calculate your DTI ratio in Minnesota and see how it compares to local lending standards. The median income here is $77K; the 28% housing limit allows $1,797/month for PITI.

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Before taxes — use total household income

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Car loans, student loans, credit card minimums, etc.

Minnesota DTI Context (2026)

$77K
Median Household Income
$330K
Median Home Price
$1,797
Max Housing (28%)
37%
Implied DTI (Median Buyer)

Buying the Median Home in Minnesota: DTI Breakdown

Median home: $330K · 10% down · 6.83% rate · 30 years

Monthly P&I payment$1,942
Property tax/mo (1.12%)$308
Homeowners insurance (est.)~$150
Total PITI$2,400/mo
Median gross monthly income$6,417
Front-end DTI (PITI ÷ income)37% ⚠ High

Understanding DTI Ratios in Minnesota

The debt-to-income ratio is the single most important metric lenders use to evaluate loan applications. It compares your total monthly debt payments to your gross monthly income. Two versions matter: the front-end ratio (housing costs only) and the back-end ratio (all monthly debt obligations).

In Minnesota, with a median household income of $77,000/year and a median home price of $330K, the price-to-income ratio is 4.3×. This is above the traditional 4× guideline, putting moderate pressure on affordability in Minnesota.

DTI Thresholds Explained

DTI RangeLender ViewMonthly Income at $77K/yr
Below 28%Excellent — easily qualifiesUnder $1,797/mo
28–36%Acceptable — qualifies with good credit$1,797–$2,310/mo
36–43%Elevated — requires compensating factors$2,310–$2,759/mo
Above 43%High — most conventional loans deniedOver $2,759/mo

Minnesota vs. National Housing Affordability

MetricMinnesotaNational Avg
Median Home Price$330,000$420,000
Median Household Income$77,000$74,580
Price-to-Income Ratio4.3×5.6×
Max Housing Budget (28%)$1,797/mo$1,740/mo

Frequently Asked Questions — Debt-to-Income Calculator in Minnesota

What is the average debt-to-income ratio in Minnesota?+
Minnesota does not publish an official statewide DTI average, but we can estimate it from housing costs. The median home price in Minnesota is $330K, and the median household income is $77,000/year ($6,417/month). A buyer purchasing the median home with a 10% down payment at 6.83% would have a monthly PITI of approximately $2,400 — implying a front-end DTI of roughly 37%. This suggests the median home in Minnesota is out of reach for the median income household under standard lending guidelines.
What DTI do mortgage lenders require in Minnesota?+
Mortgage lenders in Minnesota (and nationally) use two DTI limits: a front-end ratio of 28% (housing costs only ÷ gross income) and a back-end ratio of 36–43% (all monthly debt payments ÷ gross income). For Minnesota's median income of $77,000/year, the 28% front-end limit allows $1,797/month for housing (PITI), and the 36% back-end limit allows $2,310/month total for all debts. Conventional loans (Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac) allow up to 45% DTI with strong compensating factors like large down payments or high credit scores.
Can I afford the median home in Minnesota on the median income?+
At Minnesota's median home price of $330K and median household income of $77,000/year, a buyer with 10% down at 6.83% would have a monthly PITI of ~$2,400 — a front-end DTI of 37%. This exceeds standard lending guidelines. In Minnesota, median-income households typically need a larger down payment, dual income, or a below-median home price to qualify.
How does cost of living affect DTI in Minnesota?+
Minnesota's cost of living index of 105 (national average = 100) affects DTI by influencing how much of your income goes to non-housing expenses. Minnesota's cost of living is close to the national average, so standard DTI guidelines apply without major adjustments for local conditions.
How can I lower my DTI ratio in Minnesota?+
To lower your DTI before applying for a mortgage or loan in Minnesota: (1) Pay off or pay down high-balance revolving debt (credit cards) — this reduces monthly minimums. (2) Avoid taking on new debt for 6–12 months before applying. (3) Increase income via a raise, part-time work, or documented rental income. (4) Make a larger down payment to reduce the mortgage amount. (5) Target a less expensive home — in Minnesota, the price-to-income ratio is 4.3×, which is manageable for qualified buyers.

Data Sources & Methodology

Median home prices from National Association of Realtors. Median household income from U.S. Census Bureau ACS. Property tax rates from Tax Foundation. Mortgage rates from Freddie Mac PMMS. DTI guidelines based on Fannie Mae Selling Guide and CFPB Qualified Mortgage standards. Last updated 2026.

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Debt-to-Income Calculator by State

Each state page uses local median income and home price data to show real-world DTI context.