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How Boarder Income Can Help You Qualify for a Mortgage (& Boost Your Buying Power)

A smiling homeowner reviews mortgage paperwork at her kitchen table, symbolizing how boarder income helps boost buying power.

Overcoming Debt-to-Income Hurdles: How “Boarder Income” Can Boost Your Buying Power

Housing is expensive. (Thank you, Captain Obvious.)

If you’re makin’ it work by sharing living expenses with a partner, friend, family member, or other housemates, and assume that means buying your own place is our of reach—think again.

FHA lending rules have caught up with reality: shared housing is how many people are pushing back against today’s affordability challenges. If someone lives with you and helps cover the rent, you may be able to use their payments to help qualify for a mortgage — without adding them to the loan.

In this post, I’ll break down:

  • What counts as boarder income
  • Who qualifies under FHA’s updated rules
  • Real-world examples showing how much this can boost buying power
  • A checklist to make sure you get the paperwork right

If you’ve been told you can’t qualify because your debt-to-income ratio is too high—or want to maximize your purchasing power—this strategy may be the answer.

What Is Boarder Income in Mortgage Lending?

Lenders use the term boarder income to describe rent paid to you by someone living in your home. This might come from a traditional roommate (of course), but it could also be:

  • A partner or spouse
  • An adult child
  • A parent or grandparent
  • A sibling
  • Or literally anyone else who shares your home

If they live under your roof and help cover living expenses, their contributions could help you qualify for a higher loan amount.

And I should add, this isn’t a new idea in lending. Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and FHA have technically allowed it for years. It’s just that the fine print made it nearly impossible to use.

Why Boarder Income Was So Hard to Use Before

Fannie Mae’s “HomeReady” and Freddie Mac’s “Home Possible” both cap eligibility by income. Earn a penny more than 80% of Area Median Income (AMI), including any boarder income, and you’re disqualified.

FHA’s old rules had issues, too. They required that you show two full years of boarder rent on tax returns. (Who does that? No one!)

So while boarder income has existed in theory, we could rarely put it to work.

FHA Finally Saw the Light

FHA has modernized its rules, and that changed everything.

Under the updated guidelines:

  • There are no income limits
  • Boarder rent doesn’t have to appear on tax returns
  • And FHA already offers two built-in advantages:
    ✅ Lower interest rates
    ✅ Higher allowable debt-to-income ratios

Put it all together, and boarder income is now a practical, powerful tool for turning shared living arrangements into real buying power.

How Boarder Income Can Increase Your Buying Power

Let’s look at how this plays out in real life.

Example 1: Amanda and Her Roommates

Meet Amanda. She earns $7,500 a month. Under conventional loan rules, that qualified for a home around $424,000.

But Amanda shares her home with two roommates who each pay her rent. By switching to an FHA loan, we could add $2,000 of boarder income to the mix.

This boosted her qualifying income to $9,500 per month, and her buying power jumped to $589,000—a $168,000 increase without changing her salary, debt, or adding a cosigner.

Example 2: A Multi-Generational Household

Ellen is a single mom living with her two adult sons. Each pays her $100 a week to help with household expenses.

By adding that $867 per month in boarder income, we increased her homebuying budget by about $87,000.

What Are FHA Boarder Income Requirements?

FHA’s new rules are helpfully flexible, but you’ll still need documentation showing you meet a few specific criteria:

  • You’ve lived with your boarder(s) for at least 12 months.
  • They’ve paid rent directly to you (not to your landlord) for at least 9 of the last 12 months.
  • You plan to continue living together after you buy your new home

Check these boxes, and we can add the average rent received over the past year to your qualifying income.

Boarder Income Limits

Boarder rent is meant to supplement your income (not replace it). FHA caps boarder income at no more than 30% of your total qualifying income.

Here’s a quick formula you can use to estimate the maximum amount allowed:

Monthly Income × 0.42857 = Maximum Boarder Income Allowed

For example, if you earn $7,500 per month, the maximum boarder rent you could apply to loan qualifying is $3,214 (7,500 × 0.42857 = 3,214).

How to Document Boarder Income Correctly

If you’re already collecting rent from someone you live with—bingo! You can apply for a loan using it right away.

If not, here’s how to plan ahead and build the required paper trail:

Step-by-Step Boarder Income Documentation Checklist

  • Start now. Have your housemates, partner, or family members begin paying rent directly to you (not to your landlord).
  • Keep proof of payment. Use traceable platforms like Venmo, Zelle, or Cash App, and label each payment clearly as “rent.”
  • Avoid cash. Cash payments are almost impossible to verify.
  • Stay consistent. You must show at least 9 rent payments over a 12-month period.
  • Maintain a stable household. Rent must come from the same person (or people) for a full 12 months.
  • Keep bank accounts separate. Transfers from a joint bank account don’t count as rent.
  • Find evidence of cohabitation. Make sure your housemate has a bill, bank statement, ID, or other document showing a shared address.
  • Write a simple rent agreement. Document the monthly rent due and confirm that you plan to keep living together after the purchase.

If waiting a year to make boarder income part of your homebuying strategy feels like forever, remember: the year will pass anyway. Spending the next 12 months following this roadmap can dramatically expand your homebuying options.

When to Use Boarder Income as a Mortgage Strategy

This can make a meaningful difference when:

  • You live with someone you’re not ready to buy with—a partner, friend, or relative.
  • You have a potential co-signer or co-buyer who can’t be on the loan because of credit challenges, back taxes, hard-to-document income, or residency status.
  • You’re part of a multigenerational household.
  • You’re a house hacker using rent from housemates to help cover your overhead.

Today’s modern households have a new ally in FHA’s updated boarder income rules. Shared living isn’t just a creative way to manage costs—it’s now a smart, strategic path to homeownership.

FHA + Boarder Income = Real Buying Power

FHA loans already give borrowers an edge with flexible debt-to-income ratios and competitive rates. Adding boarder income acts as a multiplier—amplifying both. Now it’s easier to qualify, expand your buying power, and avoid adding a co-signer.

The Bottom Line: A Smarter Way to Overcome DTI Challenges

This strategy can be a powerful shortcut to boost your purchasing power and get you on the path to homeownership sooner than you thought possible.

Curious how this could look for your situation? We’re here to help.

Boarder Income Strategy Roadmap

👉 Reach out to The Workshop Team, and we’ll build a customized Boarder Income Strategy Roadmap—a personalized plan for using boarder income to stretch your buying power and make your move to a home of your own.


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Additional resources

We have a library of downloadable PDFs that cover all the mortgage fundamentals, as well as some of the trickier concepts.

Occupancy rules, 3 types of occupancy

Downloadable PDF

Occupancy

Gift Funds: Your Guide to Documentation, processing, underwriting

Downloadable PDF

Gift Fund
Documentation


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