USA TODAY International Edition
Student debt makes buying a home harder
Survey shows one in four buyers in arrears
Getting a college degree and buying a home are two milestones many Americans aspire to. But as student debt skyrockets, the burden can make homeownership tougher to achieve.
Almost one in four homebuyers this year had student loans, which made it harder for them to save for a down payment and delayed their purchase, according to the 2018 Homebuyer Profile report from the National Association of Realtors given to USA TODAY exclusively. Among buyers rejected for a mortgage from a lender, 40 percent had college debt, the NAR found.
“Student loan debt is not just a hurdle now, it will likely be one going forward,” said Jessica Lautz, NAR’s managing director of survey research and communication. “It’s also an all-generation issue as we see parents taking on debt for their children or others going back to school.” ❚ Down payment challenge: One of the first obstacles that indebted would-be buyers face is saving for a down payment. Two in five buyers, such as Jodi Meyers, cut out luxury or nonessential items to save up for a home. Rejected by the first mortgage lender she went to, Meyers, 44, consulted a second who said if she could cobble together $9,000, she could qualify for a loan. Meyers was paying off $55,000 in student loan debt after she went back to school during the recession.
For three months last year, Meyers and her husband and two adult children squirreled away cash. She earmarked her tax refund for the purchase, deferred her $600-a-month student loan payment for two months and worked with her car lender to postpone a payment until after closing. Then it was down to spending only on the necessities.
“It was not easy,” she said. “Our food was just the basics – tuna fish and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.”
At the end of it all was a $249,000, four-bedroom home in Lakeland, Florida, a 40-minute drive from where she and her family had rented in the Disney-planned community of Celebration, where homes start at $400,000.
“It’s not my dream home, but it got my foot in the door, and now I’m building equity,” she said of her new place.
❚ Compromise needed: Like Meyers, many homebuyers with student debt had to forget their ideal home and settle on whatever they could afford. Seventy-six percent of buyers with student debt compromised on their home purchase this year, according to NAR data, vs. 63 percent with no loans.
❚ Debt-to-income a killer: Another big obstacles facing buyers with student debt is a strict requirement from lenders offering government-backed mortgages: It’s called debt-to-income, or DTI. The DTI ratio shows what percentage of your monthly income goes to paying your debt. Simply divide your gross income by your total minimum payments on your debts, including your hypothetical mortgage payment, to calculate the ratio. The higher the percentage, the lower mortgage you qualify for.