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First-Time Homebuyer Pre-Approval Calculator User Guide

by | March 27, 2026

The First-Time Homebuyer Pre-Approval Calculator is designed to help first-time homebuyers understand what they can realistically afford, how lenders will evaluate their application, and what steps are needed to move forward with confidence.

This user guide is built from the calculator logic and interface. The calculator is a multi-borrower first-time home buyer pre-approval tool with tabs for Borrower 1, Borrower 2, Co-Signer, Guarantor, and Summary. It calculates affordability using income, rental income, debts, down payment, property costs, GDS/TDS limits, a stress-test qualifying rate, and a lender-lane recommendation.

It allows you to model real-life scenarios by entering income, debts, down payment, and property details, while also incorporating co-signers and guarantors where applicable.

Use the First-Time Homebuyer Pre-Approval Calculator not just to estimate affordability, but to structure your purchase correctly before applying.

Table of Contents

1. How to Use This Calculator (Overview)

2. Step-by-Step Instructions

3. Entering Borrower Information

4. Adding Income

5. Adding Rental Income

6. Adding Debts

7. Adding Down Payment

8. Adding Co-Signers

9. Adding Guarantors

10. Entering Property & Ratio Inputs

11. Understanding All Output Panels

12. Interpreting Household Summary Results

13. Understanding Mortgage Amount vs Mortgage Capacity

14. Understanding Purchase Price vs Maximum Affordable Home Price

15. Comprehending the Capacity Gap

16. Lender Fit & Recommendations

17. Required Documentation

18. Scenario Testing

19. Best Practices

Final Takeaway

1. How to Use This Calculator (Overview)

Follow this sequence:

  1. Complete Borrower 1
  2. Add Borrower 2 if applicable
  3. Add Co-Signer if needed
  4. Add Guarantor if applicable
  5. Complete the Summary tab
  6. Review results and adjust

2. Step-by-Step Instructions

Step 1: Enter Borrower Profile

For each borrower, enter:

  • Name
  • Citizenship / PR
  • Occupancy
  • On Title
  • First-Time Home Buyer
  • Credit Score

Repeat for Borrower 2 and Co-Signer if applicable.

Step 2: Add Income

Click “Add Income +”

  • Select income type
  • Enter annual amount

Example:

  • Salary: $90,000
  • Bonus: $10,000

Enter each income source separately.

Step 3: Add Rental Income (If Applicable)

  • Click “Add Rental Property +”
  • Enter annual rent and select a method

Example:

  • $2,000 per month equals $24,000 annually

Only include rental income that is actually received.

Step 4: Add Debts

Include all obligations:

  • Credit cards
  • Car loans
  • Student loans
  • Lines of credit
  • Existing mortgages

Example:

  • Credit card: $10,000 balance
  • Car loan: $400 per month

Do not omit any debts, as they directly affect affordability.

Step 5: Add Down Payment

Click “Add Down Payment Source +”

Include all sources:

  • Savings
  • Gifts
  • RRSP / FHSA
  • Borrowed funds

Example:

  • Savings: $30,000
  • Gift: $20,000

Ensure all funds are properly sourced and traceable.

3. Co-Signers (How and When to Use)

When to Use

  • Your income alone is not sufficient to qualify
  • Someone is supporting your application financially

What to Do

  • Enter full financial details
  • Treat the co-signer as an additional borrower

Example:

  • Borrower income is insufficient
  • Parent added with $85,000 income

4. Guarantors (How and When to Use)

When to Use

  • A lender requires additional support
  • The person is not contributing income for affordability

What to Do

  • Enter only basic profile information
  • Do not enter income, debts, or down payment

Guarantors do not improve affordability in this tool.

5. Entering Property & Ratio Inputs

In the Summary tab, enter:

  • Purchase Price
  • Interest Rate
  • Amortization
  • Property Taxes
  • Heating
  • Condo Fees
  • GDS Limit (default 39%)
  • TDS Limit (default 44%)

6. Understanding Output Panels

LTV (Loan-to-Value)

Shows how much of the property value is being financed.

Higher LTV means a lower down payment and potentially stricter qualification requirements.

Contract Payment

Represents your actual monthly mortgage payment based on your interest rate.

Payment Used for Ratios

Represents the higher, stress-tested payment used by lenders to qualify you.

Mortgage Payment (Housing Cost)

Includes:

  • Mortgage payment
  • Property taxes
  • Heating
  • 50% of condo fees

This represents your total housing cost for qualification.

GDS (Gross Debt Service)

Percentage of your income used for housing costs.

General guideline: 39% or less.

TDS (Total Debt Service)

Percentage of income used for housing plus all debts.

General guideline: 44% or less.

Capacity Gap

Shows whether you are within your borrowing limit.

Positive means within range.
Negative means you are over your limit.

GDS and TDS Maximum Prices

Shows the maximum home price allowed under each constraint.

Capacity-Based Maximum Price

Represents your true affordability limit based on all factors combined.

7. Interpreting Household Summary Results

This section brings everything together and determines whether your scenario works.

Focus on:

  • Mortgage Amount
  • Mortgage Capacity
  • Purchase Price
  • Maximum Affordable Home Price

8. Understanding Mortgage Amount vs Mortgage Capacity

Compare:

Mortgage Amount vs Mortgage Capacity

If Mortgage Amount is less than or equal to Capacity, the deal works.

If Mortgage Amount exceeds Capacity, the deal does not work as structured.

To fix this:

  • Increase down payment
  • Reduce purchase price
  • Add a co-signer
  • Reduce debts

9. Understanding Purchase Price vs Maximum Affordable Home Price

Compare:

Purchase Price vs Maximum Affordable Home Price

If Purchase Price is within the affordable range, you are aligned.

If it exceeds the maximum, you are targeting a property above your affordability.

To fix this:

  • Lower purchase price
  • Increase down payment
  • Improve income or reduce debts

10. Comprehending the Capacity Gap

Indicates how far you are from qualifying.

Example:

Capacity Gap = –$25,000

You are $25,000 over your limit.

Adjust by increasing down payment or lowering purchase price.

11. Putting It All Together

Your scenario works when all of the following are true:

  • Mortgage Amount is within Mortgage Capacity
  • Purchase Price is within Maximum Affordable Price
  • GDS is within acceptable limits
  • TDS is within acceptable limits
  • Capacity Gap is positive

If any of these conditions are not met, adjustments are required.

12. Lender Fit & Recommendations

The calculator categorizes your file as:

  • Prime
  • Light Alternative
  • Heavy Alternative
  • Private

Use this to understand where your application currently fits.

13. Required Documentation

The calculator generates a customized checklist.

Review all required items and begin gathering documents early.

14. Scenario Testing

Use the calculator to test different scenarios:

  • Adjust purchase price
  • Increase down payment
  • Add or remove co-signer
  • Reduce debts

This helps you find the most effective structure.

15. Best Practices

  • Enter accurate information
  • Include all debts
  • Use realistic income figures
  • Test multiple scenarios
  • Focus on affordability, not maximum approval

Final Takeaway

This calculator answers a critical question:

Does this deal work?

If your mortgage amount fits within capacity and your purchase price fits within your affordable range, you are positioned for a successful pre-approval.

If not, adjust your structure before applying.

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Allen Ehlert

Allen Ehlert

Allen Ehlert is a licensed mortgage agent. He has four university degrees, including two Masters degrees, and specializes in real estate finance, development, and investing. Allen Ehlert has decades of independent consulting experience for companies and governments, including the Ontario Real Estate Association, Deloitte, City of Toronto, Enbridge, and the Ministry of Finance.

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