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South Carolina Debt-to-Income Ratio [2026]: HFA Overlays, 43% QM Rule, and DTI Breaking Points

State-specific rules, federal court data, and practical guidance for South Carolina residents.

South Carolina Debt-to-Income Ratio (DTI) Reference

Debt-to-income ratio (DTI) is the single most-used number in South Carolina mortgage, auto, and credit-card underwriting. It has two flavors:

  • Front-end DTI: Monthly housing cost (PITI) / gross monthly income. Mortgage lenders watch this for affordability.
  • Back-end DTI: Total monthly debt payments (PITI + auto + student + credit card minimums + alimony/child support) / gross monthly income. This is the big one.
ThresholdProgram / Rule
28% front-endConventional conservative benchmark; GSE "housing ratio" guideline.
36% back-end"28/36 rule" conservative benchmark.
43%Qualified Mortgage (QM) safe-harbor cap under 12 CFR 1026.43; FHA max generally 43-50% with compensating factors.
50%Conventional max with AUS approval (Fannie Mae DU / Freddie Mac LPA); USDA guaranteed cap.
57%VA max back-end DTI for borrowers with adequate residual income.

South Carolina Median Income and DTI Reference Lines

Median household income in South Carolina is approximately $63,600/year, or $5,300/month (ACS 2022).

  • 28% front-end housing cap for median-income South Carolina household: $1,484/month.
  • 43% back-end cap (QM safe harbor): $2,279/month total debt payments.
  • Average South Carolina credit card balance: $6,050. Minimum at 2% = $121/month; this alone consumes 2.3% of median monthly income.

This is why South Carolina households with above-average credit card balances push rapidly into mortgage-disqualifying DTI, even without a car note.

South Carolina HFA / First-Time Homebuyer DTI Overlay

South Carolina state housing finance agencies (HFAs) have their own DTI overlays that may be more or less lenient than FHA/conventional. Current South Carolina overlay:

SC Housing Homebuyer: 45% DTI; 640 min.

HFA programs pair generous DTI with down-payment assistance, so a South Carolina household near 43-50% back-end DTI should check HFA options before assuming mortgage-unqualified status.

What to Do When South Carolina DTI Is Above 50%

Back-end DTI above 50% means most conventional relief tools (refi, HELOC, consolidation loan) are closed off. Options by severity:

  1. 50-57%: VA-loan refi (if eligible); HFA assistance; nonprofit credit counseling DMP. Budget restructure.
  2. 57-65%: DMP aggressive; debt settlement selectively; Chapter 13 for auto cram-down or mortgage arrears (if applicable).
  3. >65%: Bankruptcy territory. Means test to determine Ch 7 vs. Ch 13.

South Carolina Federal Bankruptcy Data

South Carolina Chapter 13 filers typically have back-end DTI above 50%. Chapter 7 filers cluster above 60% back-end when medical and credit-card debt are combined.

Numbers below come from the Federal Judicial Center Integrated Database covering 635 consumer bankruptcy cases from South Carolina's federal bankruptcy courts.

ChapterCases FiledDischarge RateDismissal Rate
Chapter 7301n/an/a
Chapter 13334n/an/a

Rates computed on resolved cases only. Source: FJC Integrated Database.

The "Means Test" Is Income-Based, Not DTI-Based

Important: the federal bankruptcy means test (11 U.S.C. 707(b)) screens on income (6-month average vs. South Carolina median), not DTI. So a South Carolina household with 80% DTI but below-median income still qualifies for Chapter 7; a below-median DTI with above-median income might be pushed into Chapter 13.

The South Carolina median-income thresholds are updated semi-annually by the UST. See means test explainer.