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Student Loans and Your First Mortgage

Is it wise to have no debt at all when you are planning a mortgage in the not-too-distant future? That’s what I was pondering after a blogger I follow was considering wiping out her student loan.

stephloan

If you’ve not read Stephanie’s blog, Graduated Learning, you might give it a try. The tag line is “I got my degree, I got a job…now what?” Not just any degree, Stephanie is an MIT graduate. Now, to her shared thought bubble above. Here’s what we know, she has a 2.75% student loan, enough cash to pay it off, and an engagement ring on her finger. No high interest debt, else that would surely be the priority for payment. Let’s look at how paying off the student loan might impact the size house she and her new hubby can buy.

We’ll make some assumptions, to offer a general idea of why you should or shouldn’t kill that last bit of debt before buying your first house. We’ll keep the math simple and start with a $100K salary. Engineering grads are starting higher than $50K, but $100K makes it easy for you to scale up or down to your our salary. When applying for a mortgage, the old ratios used to be 28/36. This means that monthly housing debt can be up to 28% of monthly income and total debt, 36%. In this example, 28% is $2333 per month. Let’s set aside $500 of this for property tax, and look at an $1833/mo mortgage payment. The 30 year fixed rate is just under 4.25% right now, so my trusty TI35 calculator tells me the new couple can afford a $372,600 mortgage. With 20% down, this is a house purchase of $465,750, and the down payment is $93,150. For most people, it’s not the mortgage that’s the deal breaker, it’s the down payment. The money she might wish to use to pay off the student loan will be very precious when she and Mr Blogger are house hunting.

Paying off the debt won’t put them in a better position, either. You recall that I mentioned that total debt service can be 36%? That 8% gap from 28 to 36 is $667/mo. Enough to support payment on a 10 year student loan of nearly $70K. You see how this works? The payment toward the loan isn’t impacting their ability to get a mortgage, and paying it off wont enable them to get a higher mortgage. But the ability to put 20% is pretty important. Imagine finding the right house, all is perfect, location, size, price, etc. But having paid off that student loan, they are a bit short on the down payment, and need to wait 6 months to save up again. Better to pay the 2.75% loan’s minimum payments, and in a year or two, after they are settled in the house, see if the emergency fund is topped off. And the retirement accounts are funded at least to the match. After that, if they wish to get rid of that low interest debt, no problem.

Last – the area we live in, not far from Boston, isn’t near the US average. Home prices can easily exceed $500K without living in a McMansion. And living too far from one’s job can result in 3 hours of daily commuting time. But again, these numbers are just an example to illustrate the need for that down payment and how the 28/36% gap can work to your benefit.

 

{ 3 comments… add one }
  • Financial Samurai November 18, 2013, 11:15 pm

    You should get Stephanie to stop by and share her thoughts!

    Although 2.75% is a low rate, paying off a student loan feels so great! I highly encourage folks to do so. Worth it.

  • Jordan Ware December 13, 2015, 12:38 pm

    This is interesting I am an in a very similar spot. I owe 33,000 in student loans. With an inheritance I am thinking about paying this off in full. It still leaves me with a pretty good personal savings account a good job and an IRA. I am very frugal saver and we live humbly. Now the kicker here is that that the monthly payments on the loans is $500 a month. Now yes i’ll be 33,000 shorter for a down payment but the monthly savings huge. With no other debt, I am in my low 30’s and absolutely debt free. That is a nice thing to be able to say. But I would like to buy a home, is the debt to income ratio for this situation a better place to be or the down payment on a home better.

  • Joe December 22, 2015, 10:55 am

    It’s tough to answer without specific numbers. $30K is 20% of $150K, so if you are looking at 20% down, you lose that much buying power. As I suggested in the article, the $500/mo shouldn’t impact your borrowing ability too much, as it fits in the gap of “other debt.”

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