Step One - Calculating Your Monthly
Income
When a loan officer pre-qualifies you, he
works backwards to figure your maximum mortgage amount.
You can do the same thing. The first step is to
determine your monthly income. It isn't quite as easy
as it sounds. Lenders only count income they can
document through paperwork.
If you are a salaried employee, and don't
earn bonuses, it's easy. Get out your paycheck.
If you get paid twice a month, multiply by two. If you
are paid every two weeks, then you multiply by 26 (the
number of pay periods in a year) and divide by twelve.
Unless you're a teacher. Teachers don't always work
year round and they have special rules.
If you are an hourly employee who works a
straight forty hours a week and don't earn overtime income,
then it's easy, too. Look at your paycheck, multiply
your hourly rate by 40, multiply that total by 52, then
divide by twelve.
If you earn overtime, bonuses, or
commissions -- it isn't as easy. Lenders don't give
you credit for what you are currently earning. They
average your income from those sources over the last two
years, then add that to your regular salary or hourly
monthly income. If you want a shortcut that is usually
close, get out your W2 forms for the last two years.
Add them together and divide by twenty-four. That is
your monthly income.
If you are a teacher, a nurse, a seasonal
employee, in construction, or earn only part-time income --
you can use that shortcut, too. Add the figures from
your last two years W2's, then divide by 24. It
generally gets you close.
If you are self-employed or receive 1099
income, then you need a two-year track record. Lenders
go by what you declare to the IRS as income, since that is
verifiable. Since some self-employed people overstate
their expenses, this may understate your income. Look
at the Schedule C of your tax returns for the last two years
and the number at the bottom that says "profit" is your
annual income. You can add any depreciation to that
figure. Add them together and divide by twenty-four.
There are variations and exceptions (like
those who own their own corporations) but the above should
cover most people.
Step Two - Working Backward
Once you have calculated your monthly
income, multiply it by the back ratio for your particular
loan. For generic purposes, it is fairly easy to work
with thirty-eight. Take 38% of your monthly income or
multiply it by .38. That tells you the maximum the
lender wants you to spend on your housing costs and monthly
consumer debt combined.
Now get out your bills and total them up
to determine what you spend monthly on debt. Do not
include your auto insurance or your utilities. Just
creditors. For credit cards, use the minimum required
monthly payment unless it is less than ten dollars.
The rest should be fairly straightforward.
Deduct that amount from the total the
lender wants you to spend on housing costs and consumer debt
combined. Now you know the maximum the lender wants
you to spend for housing costs, unless the figure is greater
than 33% of your monthly income (there are exceptions, of
course).
Step Three - a Little
Guesswork
The next step requires a little guesswork.
If you have a vague idea of what price you might qualify
for, you can estimate what your annual property taxes and
homeowners insurance might cost. From there, you can
easily calculate the monthly equivalent. Subtract
those figures from your maximum monthly housing costs total.
If you are buying a condominium (or an
area with Home Owner Association fees), subtract out an
approximate figure to cover homeowners association fees.
What you are left with is your maximum principal and
interest payment.
The Final Step - Almost
Now you have to go to a mortgage
calculator (click
here) and plug in some numbers. In the
"payment" area, put the figure you just calculated.
Plug in the current fixed interest rate. If you are
putting less than twenty percent down, add a half percent to
the rate to allow for charges you will pay for mortgage
insurance.
Hit the calculate button and you should
have your maximum mortgage amount. Add your down
payment and you know your maximum purchase price.
Maybe. You may have to do some
fine-tuning to zero in on the exact figure. Plus,
lenders know how to "stretch" a client a bit higher if they
need it.
Advice
If the figure is less than you expected
(or need), lenders know programs that will help "boost" you
higher in qualifying. Plus, they will do what you just
did for free, they are much more experienced at the various
nuances involved, and you will have no obligation to use
them as your lender.
All you have to do is pick up the phone
and call
Imperial Mortgage Consultants or visit
http://www.imcmortgages.com.