Why Is Alimoney Such a Drag?
June 19, 2000
"I make $93,000.00 a year, have good credit, and my only debt is a $340
monthly car payment. I also pay alimony of $2500 a month. When I use
your affordability calculator and subtract the alimony from my income, I
can afford a $200,000 house. But the lenders I spoke to say that the
alimony must be added to my debt. When I do that I can't afford any
house. Are they right?"
The lenders are analyzing your situation with long-standing,
conventional underwriting rules. Unfortunately, these rules are poorly
designed and sometimes yield absurd conclusions -- as in your case.
Lenders want to be sure you have enough income to meet your anticipated
housing expenses, including principal, interest, mortgage insurance,
property taxes, and hazard insurance. The logical way to do this is to
compare your anticipated housing expenses to your net income. Net income
is the income remaining after deduction of other legally-mandated
obligations, including taxes, payments on other debt, and alimony.
But that isn't the way it is done. The practice is to require that
applicants meet two qualification tests. One is a maximum ratio of
housing expense (as defined in the preceding paragraph) to gross income.
The second is a maximum ratio of total expense (housing expense plus
debt payments) to gross income. Typical ratios are 28% and 36%. Taxes
are ignored in both ratios but alimony payments are considered debt.
Here are a few of the absurdities this rule can create.
* Doe and Smith have the same housing expense and the same income but
Doe pays 30% of his income in taxes while Smith pays 15% in taxes and
15% in alimony. Doe passes and Smith flunks.
* John Doe has a housing expense ratio of 29% but no debt, while John
Smith has a housing expense ratio of 28% and debt of 8% (a total expense
ratio of 36%). Doe flunks while Smith passes.
Fortunately, qualification rules are not cast in stone. They are
modified and stretched for special circumstances every day of the week.
There are plenty of lenders and mortgage brokers out there who will work
with you to get a deal done. You just need to cast a wider net.