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How to get around DTI limitations?
Hi BP,
I get this question over and over again from new real estate investors that are just starting out - how do I get around DTI limitations? In order to buy more real estate by means of conventional lending, you have to significantly (and sometimes unrealistically) increase your income. Many new investors, unless they have a very high income, will face this issue after the 2nd or even 1st house they purchase (especially in more expensive areas).
What are the best ways of thinking about this issue? And what are the more common ways of bypassing these limitations? Is private lending the best way to do this or are there better/more beginner friendly ways?
Thanks!
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Quote from @Michael Smythies:
Hi BP,
I get this question over and over again from new real estate investors that are just starting out - how do I get around DTI limitations? In order to buy more real estate by means of conventional lending, you have to significantly (and sometimes unrealistically) increase your income. Many new investors, unless they have a very high income, will face this issue after the 2nd or even 1st house they purchase (especially in more expensive areas).
What are the best ways of thinking about this issue? And what are the more common ways of bypassing these limitations? Is private lending the best way to do this or are there better/more beginner friendly ways?
Thanks!
Assuming you are buying cashflow positive real estate, DTI should get better with each acquisition. Sometimes it doesn't "look" cashflow positive on tax returns, that's probably the most common thing jamming people up. Top two culprits for that are:
a) advanced business entity tax strategies. Cool, you made yourself look broke, the Agency mortgage underwriter sees that too. Whoops. Solution here is DSCR loans, that comes with higher rates and fees. Hopefully the tax savings make up for it, but it's a package deal.
b) Things on Schedule E of your personal tax returns that I will politely call "errors." Schedule E is where your rental property income is reported, if you don't have any fancy business entity tax strategies going on. Two tips:
1) If your CPA gives you a choice between writing off an expense as a "repair" or as "depreciation," depreciate it (if you want Agency 30YF good mortgages, that is). The underwriter will "add back" that write-off to your income, so it'll save you tax money without hurting your DTI.
2) Fair rental days. CPA software defaults/auto-populates to 365, and your CPA left that default value in for whatever reason. But you purchased the property in June. So the underwriter may divide your 6 months of income by 12, and effectively cut your calculated rents in half (b/c you told the IRS you had it rented the entire year). If you only owned the property half the year, then fair rental days should be more along the lines of 30 * 6 = 180 days.
The other reasons people have DTI issues either aren't real estate investor specific (such as quitting your W2 job for a 1099 gig), or are examples of "the system working as intended" (such as buying a bunch of poorly cashflowing properties).