Glossary · Definition

What is Income-to-Rent Ratio?

The income-to-rent ratio is the standard underwriting test apartment communities use to determine if you can afford a unit. Most Denver communities require verifiable gross monthly income at 2.5 to 3 times the monthly rent.

Full Definition

The income-to-rent ratio is the test apartment communities use to qualify renters. The standard requirement: gross monthly income must be at least 2.5x to 3x the monthly rent. This is BEFORE taxes and deductions.

For a $1,500/month apartment, that means $3,750/month gross income (at 2.5x) or $4,500/month gross (at 3x) — which is approximately $45,000-$54,000 annual gross.

Income can be verified through pay stubs (2-3 most recent), W-2s, employer letter, tax returns (for self-employed), or bank statements showing consistent deposits. Roommates' incomes can be combined if both are on the lease.

How Income-to-Rent Ratio Works in Denver Specifically

Most Denver apartment communities apply the standard 2.5-3x rule. Luxury buildings tend toward 3x; B-class workforce buildings often accept 2.5x with strong other factors. If your income is below 2.5x: consider a co-signer/guarantor, a smaller unit, or roommate to combine incomes.

Need Help Navigating This?

Juan David Rodriguez at Denver Apartment Pro is a bilingual (English/Spanish) apartment locator serving the Denver metro area. The service is free for renters because apartment communities pay the commission. Call, text, or WhatsApp (720) 560-2740.

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