Free Co-Signer Risk Calculator: US Liability & DTI Impact Model
Before you sign the FTC Co-Signer Notice, know the exact numbers. This is the only US calculator that converts your joint and several liability into concrete dollar figures — calculating your maximum deficiency judgment risk, post-signing DTI impact on mortgage eligibility, FICO score exposure, Chapter 13 bankruptcy traps, and your co-signer release timeline.
Your co-signer risk analysis will appear here.
Enter the loan details, the borrower’s profile, and your financial information — then click Calculate to see your total liability, DTI impact, credit score risk, bankruptcy exposure, and whether you can get out.
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| Year | Remaining Balance | Remaining Interest | Est. Fees (5%) | Max Liability |
|---|
Chapter 7 text here.
Chapter 13 text here.
How to Calculate Your Maximum Co-Signer Liability & Credit Risk
US Co-Signer Glossary: Joint Liability, FTC Rules & Bankruptcy Exposure
Example: $18,500 balance + $4,200 interest + $925 fees = $23,625
| Risk Factor | Weight | What It Measures |
|---|---|---|
| Borrower Credit Score | 0–30 pts | Under 580 = 30 pts (highest risk). 740+ = 4 pts (lowest risk). |
| Missed Payments (12 mo) | 0–25 pts | 3+ missed payments in the last year = 25 pts maximum risk. |
| Employment Stability | 0–20 pts | W-2 full-time = 0 pts. Unemployed = 20 pts. Gig/student in between. |
| Loan Type Risk | 0–10 pts | Business loans = 10 pts (personal guarantee exposure). Mortgage = 4 pts. |
| Relationship | 0–8 pts | Arms-length relationships (friend, business partner) score higher risk. |
| Loan-to-Income Ratio | 0–7 pts | Loan amount exceeds 2× borrower’s annual income = 7 pts. |
Before: ($1,200 debts ÷ $6,000 income) × 100 = 20% DTI
After co-signing $450/mo: ($1,650 ÷ $6,000) × 100 = 27.5% DTI
| DTI Zone | Range | What It Means for You |
|---|---|---|
| ✅ Safe | Under 28% | Comfortable zone. You’ll qualify for the best mortgage rates and terms. |
| ⚠️ Caution | 28%–36% | May qualify for conventional loans, but with less favorable terms. |
| ⚠️ FHA Limit | 36%–43% | Exceeds conventional limit (36%). May still qualify for FHA (43% max). |
| 🚨 Danger | Above 43% | Exceeds FHA maximum. Likely ineligible for any new major loan. |
| Your Starting Score | Best Case (On-Time) | One 30-Day Late | Default (90+ Days) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under 580 | +0 to +5 pts | –60 to –80 pts | –80 to –100 pts |
| 580–669 | +3 to +8 pts | –60 to –80 pts | –80 to –110 pts |
| 670–739 | +5 to +12 pts | –80 to –100 pts | –100 to –130 pts |
| 740+ | +10 to +20 pts | –90 to –110 pts | –120 to –150 pts |
P = loan principal | r = monthly rate (APR ÷ 12 ÷ 100) | n = total months
| Scenario | Co-Debtor Stay? | Your Exposure |
|---|---|---|
| Consumer debt + Ch.13 active | ✅ Yes (temporary) | Protected while plan is active (3–5 years) |
| Consumer debt + Ch.13 dismissed | ❌ Ends immediately | Full balance becomes your liability |
| Business debt + Ch.13 | ❌ Does NOT apply | Creditors can pursue you immediately |
| Any debt + Ch.7 | ❌ No protection | Full balance is your sole obligation |
| Loan Type | Typical Requirement | Release Available? |
|---|---|---|
| 🎓 Private Student Loan | 12–24 on-time payments + income/credit check + graduation proof | ✅ Yes (most lenders) |
| 🚗 Auto Loan | 12+ months on-time + borrower 670+ credit score | ⚠️ Some lenders (often requires refinance) |
| 🏠 Mortgage | Full refinance in borrower’s name only | ❌ No release — refinance required |
| 👤 Personal Loan | Typically requires full payoff or refinance | ❌ No standard release process |
| 🏢 Business Loan / SBA | Paid in full only | ❌ No release until loan is fully repaid |
5 Real U.S. Co-Signer Case Studies: Auto, Student Loans & Personal Guarantees
| Loan Amount | $28,000 |
| APR | 7.9% |
| Loan Term | 60 months (5 years) |
| Monthly Payment | $566 |
| Months Paid Before Default | 8 months |
| Remaining Balance at Default | $24,280 |
| Remaining Interest | $5,152 |
| Risk Score | 68 / 100 — HIGH |
| Loan Amount | $45,000 |
| APR | 9.5% (variable) |
| Loan Term | 120 months (10 years) |
| Monthly Payment | $582 |
| Months Before Issue | 6 (deferment) |
| Balance After Deferment | $47,138 |
| Remaining Interest | $24,702 |
| Risk Score | 54 / 100 — HIGH |
| Loan Amount | $220,000 |
| APR | 6.8% (FHA 30-year fixed) |
| Loan Term | 360 months (30 years) |
| Monthly Payment (PITI) | $1,680 |
| Months Paid Before Default | 18 months |
| Remaining Balance | $214,800 |
| Remaining Interest | $389,480 |
| Risk Score | 76 / 100 — VERY HIGH |
| Loan Amount | $75,000 |
| APR | 11.5% (SBA 7(a)) |
| Loan Term | 84 months (7 years) |
| Monthly Payment | $1,228 |
| Months Paid Before Closure | 14 months |
| Remaining Balance | $62,400 |
| Remaining Interest | $23,560 |
| Risk Score | 82 / 100 — VERY HIGH |
| Loan Amount | $18,000 |
| APR | 12.5% |
| Loan Term | 48 months (4 years) |
| Monthly Payment | $480 |
| Months Paid Before Default | 10 months |
| Remaining Balance | $14,200 |
| Remaining Interest | $4,020 |
| Risk Score | 62 / 100 — HIGH |
| # | Person / Scenario | Loan Type | Loan Amount | Max Liability | DTI Impact | Credit Hit | Risk Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Maria G. — Son’s Car, TX | 🚗 Auto | $28,000 | $30,646 | 25% → 36.8% | –110 pts | 68 HIGH |
| 2 | Robert K. — Daughter’s Education, GA | 🎓 Student | $45,000 | $74,197 | 22.2% → 30.3% | –28 pts | 54 HIGH |
| 3 | Linda P. — Nephew’s House, AZ | 🏠 Mortgage | $220,000 | $615,020 | 18.4% → 62.6% | –140 pts | 76 VERY HIGH |
| 4 | David W. — Brother’s Restaurant, OH | 🏢 Business | $75,000 | $89,080 | 28.2% → 42.7% | –130 pts | 82 VERY HIGH |
| 5 | Sarah T. — Friend’s Debt, CO | 👤 Personal | $18,000 | $18,930 | 24.2% → 31.9% | –115 pts | 62 HIGH |
| TOTAL across all 5 co-signers | — | $386,000 | $827,873 | — | — | — |
5 Pro Tips for U.S. Co-Signers: Avoiding Debt Traps & Protecting Your FICO Score
Demand the FTC Co-Signer Notice & Negotiate Your Liability Cap
Under the FTC Credit Practices Rule (16 CFR §444.3), every lender is legally required to provide co-signers with a written notice before you sign. This notice must state: “You are being asked to guarantee this debt. Think carefully before you do. If the borrower doesn’t pay the debt, you will have to.”
But here’s what most people miss — the notice is just a disclosure. It gives you no legal protections by itself. The real power lies in what you negotiate before signing. Three contract clauses can dramatically limit your exposure, and most lenders will agree to at least one if you ask:
Clause 1 — Cap your liability at principal only. Ask to exclude accrued interest and collection fees from your obligation. On a $30,000 auto loan, this can reduce your worst-case from $38,000+ to $30,000 flat.
Clause 2 — Require the lender to notify you within 10 days of any missed payment. Standard loans can go 60–90 days before you’re notified. By then, the damage to your credit is already done.
Clause 3 — Limit your liability to principal only (no acceleration). Without this, one missed payment can trigger an acceleration clause making the entire remaining balance due immediately.
- 1Before signing anything, say: “I’d like to receive the FTC-required co-signer notice as a separate document.” If the lender can’t produce it, that’s a red flag — and a federal violation.
- 2Ask the loan officer: “Can we add a clause limiting my liability to the outstanding principal balance, excluding collection costs and accelerated interest?”
- 3Request in writing: “Please add a provision requiring the lender to notify me within 10 business days of any missed or late payment by the primary borrower.”
- 4Get all agreed modifications in the signed loan agreement — verbal promises from loan officers are unenforceable.
1. Early notification of missed payments → Approved. Patricia got email alerts starting Day 5 of any late payment.
2. Cap on collection fees → Partially approved. Fees capped at 2% instead of the standard 5%.
3. Written confirmation of co-signer release requirements → Approved. She received a letter specifying exactly 12 months of on-time payments needed.
When her son missed a payment in Month 8, Patricia was notified on Day 5 — not Day 60. She made the payment herself ($310), avoided a credit score hit, and her son resumed payments the next month. Without the notification clause, she would have discovered the missed payment after a 30-day late was already on her credit report.
Calculate Your Post-Co-Signing DTI to Protect Your Mortgage Eligibility
Your Debt-to-Income ratio (DTI) is the single most important number in lending. It’s calculated as: (Total monthly debt payments ÷ Gross monthly income) × 100. When you co-sign a loan, the full monthly payment is added to your debt — not half, not a fraction — 100% of it.
This means a $566/month auto loan co-sign on a $4,800/month income adds 11.8 percentage points to your DTI. If you were at 25% before, you’re now at 36.8% — above the conventional mortgage limit of 36%. You just locked yourself out of buying a home.
The calculator above shows you this exact impact in the DTI Before & After panel. But the critical insight is timing: your DTI stays elevated for the entire loan term, not just while the borrower pays. A 60-month auto loan means 5 years of reduced borrowing power. A 30-year mortgage co-sign means your DTI is impacted until you’re potentially in your 80s.
- 1Use the calculator above: enter your income, existing debts, and the proposed co-signed loan. Check the DTI After field. If it’s above 36%, co-signing will block conventional mortgages.
- 2Check the Borrowing Power Lost panel — this shows the exact dollar amount of mortgage you can no longer qualify for.
- 3If you plan to buy a home, refinance, or take any major loan in the next 3–10 years, seriously reconsider co-signing.
- 4Ask yourself: “Can I afford to make this payment myself every month for the full loan term?” If the answer is no, don’t sign.
Two years later, Angela applied for a $240,000 mortgage with a conventional lender. She was denied — her DTI was 37.2%, above the 36% limit. The co-signed loan was still active with 36 months remaining.
Angela’s options: (1) wait 3 more years for the loan to pay off, (2) convince her sister to refinance alone, or (3) apply for FHA (43% limit) with a higher interest rate and mandatory PMI — adding $187/month to her housing costs.
Result: Angela chose FHA. Over 30 years, the higher rate + PMI cost her an extra $67,320 — all because of a $22,000 co-sign she thought was “helping family.”
The Bankruptcy Trap: Why Chapter 13 Doesn’t Protect Business Co-Signers
Most people assume that if the borrower files bankruptcy, a judge will “figure it out” and protect the co-signer. This is dangerously wrong. Here’s how bankruptcy actually works for co-signers under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code:
Chapter 7 (Liquidation): The borrower’s debt is discharged. Your liability becomes 100% yours immediately. There is zero co-signer protection under Chapter 7 — none. The full remaining balance, interest, and fees shift to you the day the discharge is granted. (11 U.S.C. §524(e))
Chapter 13 (Repayment Plan): Section 1301 provides a “co-debtor stay” — a temporary shield that stops creditors from collecting from you while the borrower’s 3–5 year repayment plan is active. BUT this stay applies only to consumer debts. If you co-signed a business loan, SBA loan, or commercial lease, the co-debtor stay does not apply. The lender can pursue you immediately, even during the Chapter 13 case.
The calculator above checks this in the Bankruptcy Exposure panel — if you selected “Business” as the loan type, it warns you that the co-debtor stay is unavailable.
- 1Before co-signing, ask: “Is this a consumer debt or a business debt?” If business, understand you have zero bankruptcy protection — period.
- 2Ask the borrower directly: “If your business fails, would you file Chapter 7 or Chapter 13?” Under Chapter 7, you’re immediately liable regardless of debt type.
- 3If co-signing a business loan, consult an attorney about a written indemnification agreement with the borrower — this won’t stop the lender from pursuing you, but gives you a legal claim against the borrower’s future assets.
- 4Run the calculator above with the “Business” loan type selected and check the Bankruptcy Exposure panel for your specific dollar exposure.
It didn’t. Because the SBA loan was a business debt, the Chapter 13 co-debtor stay under §1301 did not apply. The SBA lender filed a deficiency judgment against Kevin within 45 days of the bankruptcy filing.
Kevin’s $92,000 in home equity and $28,000 in savings were both subject to the judgment. After negotiation, Kevin settled for $41,000 — still a devastating loss on a loan he never personally benefited from.
Had Kevin co-signed a consumer loan of the same amount (e.g., a personal loan), the Chapter 13 co-debtor stay would have shielded him for 3–5 years while his brother repaid.
Use the “Authorized User” Credit-Building Strategy Instead of Co-Signing
The #1 reason people need a co-signer is a thin or low credit file. Instead of taking on tens of thousands in liability, you can help the borrower build credit independently — often in just 3–6 months. The fastest legal method: the authorized user strategy.
When you add someone as an authorized user on a credit card with a strong payment history (on-time, low utilization), your card’s entire payment history gets added to their credit report. A card with 5+ years of perfect payments and under 10% utilization can boost a thin-file score by 40–80 points within 1–2 billing cycles (this is called “credit piggybacking” and is 100% legal under ECOA).
Here’s the key: you don’t have to give them the card. You can add them as an authorized user, receive the physical card, and lock it in a drawer. They get the credit benefit without spending ability. Your liability is $0, your DTI is unaffected, and their score rises.
Combine this with a $200–$500 secured credit card in their name (Discover it® Secured, Capital One Platinum Secured) and a credit-builder loan ($500–$1,000 from a credit union), and the borrower can go from a 580 to a 670+ score in 4–6 months — crossing the threshold where most lenders no longer require a co-signer.
- 1Month 1: Add them as an authorized user on your oldest, lowest-utilization card. Do NOT give them the physical card. Call the issuer to confirm they report AU accounts to all 3 bureaus.
- 2Month 1: Help them open a secured credit card ($200–$500 deposit). Have them make one small purchase/month ($20–$50) and pay in full.
- 3Month 2: Open a credit-builder loan at a local credit union ($500–$1,000, 12 months). Payments are reported to all 3 bureaus.
- 4Month 6: Pull their credit score. Most people see a 50–80 point increase from these 3 combined actions. If they’re at 670+, apply for the loan without a co-signer.
Month 1: Added James as AU on her Discover card (8 years old, $300/$10,000 balance = 3% utilization). James’s score jumped to 618 within 30 days.
Month 1: James opened a Discover it® Secured card ($300 deposit). Charged Netflix ($15.99/mo), paid in full each month.
Month 2: Opened a $500 credit-builder loan at Navy Federal CU ($42/mo for 12 months).
Month 5: James’s score hit 692. He qualified for a Capital One auto loan at 8.9% APR — no co-signer needed. Michelle avoided $22,000+ in maximum liability.
Total cost to Michelle: $0. Total risk: $0. Total DTI impact: $0.
Set Up Your Co-Signer Release & Escape Plan Before Day 1
If after weighing all the risks you still decide to co-sign, your #1 priority is planning the exit from Day 1. Too many co-signers assume the borrower will handle everything — then discover years later that the release window passed because of a single late payment that reset the clock.
Co-signer release requirements vary dramatically by loan type:
- 1Get release terms in writing. Before signing, request a letter from the lender specifying: exact number of on-time payments required, credit score minimum, income verification requirements, and the application process.
- 2Set up auto-pay from the borrower’s bank account. Most release programs require consecutive on-time payments. One missed payment resets the clock to zero. Auto-pay eliminates human error.
- 3Get online account access. Log in monthly to verify payments are posting. Set up email/text alerts for payment confirmations and any balance changes.
- 4Set a calendar reminder for 30 days before the release eligibility date. On that date, immediately submit the release application. Don’t wait — some lenders have limited processing windows.
- 5Monitor your credit report. Use AnnualCreditReport.com (free weekly from all 3 bureaus) to verify the co-signed loan is reporting accurately and that your score isn’t being impacted.
✅ Got release terms in writing: 12 consecutive on-time payments + borrower’s credit score ≥ 670 + income verification.
✅ Set up auto-pay from her daughter’s checking account — payments debited 5 days before the due date (safety margin).
✅ Set a Google Calendar reminder for Month 11: “Start Sallie Mae co-signer release application.”
✅ In Month 12, submitted the release application online. Approved in 14 business days. Diana was fully released — her credit report updated within 30 days, and her DTI dropped by 8 percentage points.
Why most co-signers fail to get released: A 2023 CFPB study found that only ~10% of eligible co-signers actually apply for release. Reasons: didn’t know it existed, missed a payment (clock reset), borrower’s credit score didn’t qualify, or they simply forgot.
U.S. Co-Signer FAQ: Wage Garnishment, Credit Drops & Exit Strategies Answered
Co-signing a loan means you are legally guaranteeing someone else’s debt. You sign the loan agreement alongside the primary borrower, and you become equally responsible for the full loan balance — principal, interest, late fees, and collection costs. It doesn’t matter whether you receive any benefit from the loan. As the FTC states: “If the borrower doesn’t pay the debt, you will have to.”
Under the legal principle of “joint and several liability,” the lender can pursue you for 100% of the debt without first attempting to collect from the primary borrower. There is no legal requirement that the lender exhaust all collection efforts against the borrower before coming after you.
A co-signer guarantees the debt but typically has no ownership rights to the asset purchased with the loan (such as a car or investment property). A co-borrower (also called a “co-applicant”) shares both the debt obligation AND ownership of the asset. Both appear on the loan agreement and both credit reports are affected equally.
| Factor | Co-Signer | Co-Borrower |
|---|---|---|
| Legal liability for full debt | ✅ Yes — 100% | ✅ Yes — 100% |
| Ownership of the asset | ❌ Usually none | ✅ Yes — shared |
| Appears on credit report | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| DTI impact | ✅ Full payment counted | ✅ Full payment counted |
| Can use/benefit from asset | ❌ No | ✅ Yes |
The critical difference: a co-signer takes on all the risk with none of the ownership. This is why financial advisors generally recommend against co-signing — you bear the downside with zero upside.
Yes. Under the principle of joint and several liability, the lender can pursue any obligated party — the borrower, the co-signer, or both — at any time, in any order. There is no legal requirement that the lender first attempt collection against the primary borrower before contacting the co-signer.
In practice, lenders typically contact both parties when a payment is missed. However, if the primary borrower becomes unreachable (moved, changed phone number, etc.), the lender will redirect all collection efforts to the co-signer. This includes phone calls, letters, credit reporting, and legal action such as wage garnishment and asset seizure.
Yes — it’s federal law. Under the FTC’s Credit Practices Rule (16 CFR §444.3), every lender is legally required to provide co-signers with a written “Notice to Cosigner” before you sign the loan agreement. The notice must clearly state that you may be liable for the full amount of the debt if the borrower fails to pay.
The official FTC notice language reads: “You are being asked to guarantee this debt. Think carefully before you do. If the borrower doesn’t pay the debt, you will have to. Be sure you can afford to pay if you have to, and that you want to accept this responsibility.”
If your lender did not provide this notice, that’s a federal violation. You should contact the FTC (ftc.gov/complaint) and your state’s attorney general office. However, failure to provide the notice does not void your co-signer obligation — it’s a regulatory violation by the lender, not a defense against the debt.
Joint and several liability is the legal principle that makes co-signing so dangerous. It means each party on the loan — the primary borrower AND the co-signer — is independently responsible for the entire debt, not just a portion of it. The lender doesn’t split the balance 50/50. Each person owes 100%.
This means:
- The lender can demand the full amount from you alone, even if the borrower has assets
- If you pay the full debt, you’d have to sue the borrower separately to recover their share (right of contribution) — which is often impractical if they’re already unable to pay
- If there are multiple co-signers, each one is liable for 100% — not split among them
Yes — in multiple ways. The co-signed loan appears on your credit report as if it were your own loan. Even with perfect on-time payments, the following credit impacts occur:
- Hard inquiry: The initial loan application triggers a hard credit pull, which can reduce your score by 5–10 points temporarily
- New account / reduced average age: The new loan lowers your average account age, which can reduce your score by 5–15 points
- Increased total debt: Your overall debt load increases, potentially affecting your credit utilization and debt-to-credit ratios
- Positive: On-time payments over time do add to your positive payment history and improve your credit mix (installment + revolving)
Net effect with perfect payments: typically a small temporary decrease (5–20 points) followed by a gradual improvement if all payments remain on time for 12+ months.
The damage depends on your current credit score — higher scores fall harder. A single 30-day late payment on a co-signed loan is reported to all three credit bureaus identically on your report as it is on the borrower’s report. Based on published FICO scoring guidelines:
| Your Score Before | 30-Day Late | 90-Day Default | Charge-Off / Collections |
|---|---|---|---|
| 740+ (Excellent) | –90 to –110 pts | –120 to –150 pts | –150 to –200+ pts |
| 670–739 (Good) | –80 to –100 pts | –100 to –130 pts | –130 to –170 pts |
| 580–669 (Fair) | –60 to –80 pts | –80 to –110 pts | –100 to –140 pts |
| Under 580 (Poor) | –30 to –50 pts | –50 to –80 pts | –60 to –100 pts |
The late payment stays on your credit report for 7 years from the date of the late payment, though its impact diminishes over time. Use the calculator above to see your specific estimated credit impact.
Yes — this is the most underestimated impact of co-signing. The full monthly payment of the co-signed loan is counted as your debt in every future credit application. Lenders don’t care that the borrower is the one making payments — the payment goes into your Debt-to-Income ratio (DTI) calculation at 100%.
Conventional mortgages require a DTI of 36% or lower (some allow up to 43%). FHA mortgages allow up to 43% DTI (sometimes 50% with compensating factors). If co-signing a $500/month auto loan pushes your DTI from 32% to 42%, you’ve just been locked out of conventional mortgage lending.
No — not while the loan is active. As long as the co-signed loan exists, it will appear on your credit report. You cannot dispute it off because the information is accurate — you did sign the agreement. There are only three ways to remove a co-signed loan from your credit report:
- Co-signer release: Some lenders (particularly student loan companies like Sallie Mae) offer formal release after 12–24 consecutive on-time payments
- Refinancing: The borrower refinances the loan in their name only, which closes the original co-signed loan
- Payoff: The loan is paid off in full
Once the loan is closed (by any method), it remains on your credit report as a closed account for 10 years if it had positive payment history, or 7 years from the date of any negative marks.
When the borrower stops paying, a cascade of consequences hits the co-signer — often before the co-signer even knows there’s a problem:
- Day 1–29 (Late): The lender may contact both parties. Internal late fees are assessed. No credit impact yet.
- Day 30 (30-day late): The missed payment is reported to all 3 credit bureaus on both the borrower’s AND your credit report. Your score drops immediately (see FAQ #7 for point ranges).
- Day 60–90: The account is flagged as seriously delinquent. Additional late fees compound. Score drops further.
- Day 90–120: The lender may “accelerate” the loan — demanding the entire remaining balance due immediately, not just the missed payments.
- Day 120+ (Default/Charge-Off): The lender charges off the debt and may sell it to a collections agency. Both the charge-off AND the collection account appear on your credit report. The collector can now sue you.
- Judgment: If the collector wins a court judgment, they can garnish your wages (up to 25% of disposable income in most states), levy your bank accounts, and place liens on your property.
Yes. If the lender or collection agency obtains a court judgment against you (which they can, since you are equally liable), they can garnish your wages. Under federal law, wage garnishment for consumer debt is limited to 25% of your disposable earnings or the amount by which your weekly earnings exceed 30 times the federal minimum wage — whichever is less.
Some states offer additional protections or lower garnishment limits. Four states — Texas, South Carolina, Pennsylvania, and North Carolina — generally prohibit wage garnishment for most consumer debts (though exceptions exist for taxes, child support, and student loans).
Yes — you have a legal “right of contribution.” If you pay more than your share of the co-signed debt (and since the borrower should be paying 100%, any payment you make qualifies), you can sue the borrower in civil court to recover the amount you paid.
However, there’s a harsh practical reality: the borrower already couldn’t pay the loan. If they had assets or income to seize, the original lender would have collected. You’d be suing someone who likely has nothing to collect. You’d win the judgment but collect nothing — while paying attorney fees.
Yes — but it varies by state and debt type. The statute of limitations (SOL) sets a deadline for lenders or collectors to file a lawsuit against you. Once the SOL expires, the debt becomes “time-barred” — they can still ask you to pay, but they cannot sue you to collect.
| Debt Type | Typical SOL Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Written contracts (most loans) | 3–10 years | Varies by state; starts from last payment date |
| Oral agreements | 2–6 years | Rare for co-signed loans |
| Promissory notes | 3–15 years | Common for student loans |
| Federal student loans | No limit | No statute of limitations |
Under Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the borrower’s personal obligation on the debt is discharged (erased). However, the co-signer receives absolutely zero protection. The debt is NOT discharged for the co-signer. Per 11 U.S.C. §524(e): “discharge of a debt of the debtor does not affect the liability of any other entity on such debt.”
This means the full remaining balance — principal, accrued interest, and fees — immediately becomes your sole obligation. The lender will redirect all collection efforts to you. This is often the most devastating scenario for co-signers because the borrower’s bankruptcy typically signals they have no assets to help repay.
No — it only protects co-signers on consumer debts. The Chapter 13 co-debtor stay (11 U.S.C. §1301) is a temporary protection that stops creditors from pursuing co-signers while the borrower completes a 3–5 year repayment plan. However, this protection has critical limitations:
- Consumer debts only: Auto loans, student loans, personal loans, and mortgages are generally consumer debts — the stay applies
- Business debts excluded: SBA loans, commercial leases, business lines of credit, and personal guarantees on business loans are NOT covered. The lender can pursue the co-signer immediately, even during the Chapter 13 case.
- Temporary: The stay only lasts while the repayment plan is active. If the plan fails (~33% do), the stay lifts and the co-signer is fully exposed
- Lender can petition to lift: The court may lift the co-debtor stay if the co-signer’s interest is not adequately protected by the plan
This is a serious decision that depends on the size of the debt relative to the co-signer’s total financial picture. Filing bankruptcy is a last resort with severe consequences (Chapter 7 stays on your credit for 10 years, Chapter 13 for 7 years). However, if the co-signed debt is large enough to make other debts unmanageable, it may be the most rational path.
When co-signer bankruptcy may make sense:
- The co-signed debt exceeds 40–50% of your annual income
- You have other debts that become unmanageable once the co-signed debt hits your credit
- Your income is below the state median (Chapter 7 eligibility via means test)
When it does NOT make sense:
- The debt is manageable with a payment plan or debt settlement
- You have significant assets you’d lose in Chapter 7 (above state exemption limits)
- Your credit score is critical for near-term needs (mortgage, employment screening)
Private student loan co-signer release is the most available type of release, but requirements vary by lender. The general process:
| Lender | On-Time Payments Required | Additional Requirements |
|---|---|---|
| Sallie Mae / Navient | 12 consecutive | Borrower must meet credit & income criteria; graduation required |
| Discover Student Loans | 12 consecutive | Borrower must demonstrate ability to repay alone |
| College Ave | 12 consecutive | Borrower credit check + income verification |
| Navy Federal CU | 24 consecutive | Borrower must independently qualify |
| Citizens Bank | 36 consecutive | Borrower must have satisfactory credit history |
No — there is no co-signer release program for mortgages. This is the most important fact about mortgage co-signing that most people don’t learn until it’s too late. Unlike student loans and some auto loans, no mortgage lender (conventional, FHA, VA, or USDA) offers a formal co-signer release process.
The only way to remove yourself from a co-signed mortgage is:
- Full refinance: The primary borrower refinances the mortgage in their name alone, which requires them to independently qualify (credit score, income, DTI)
- Sale of the property: The home is sold and the mortgage paid off
- Full payoff: The mortgage is paid in full from other sources
For a 30-year mortgage, this means you could be on the hook for up to 30 years — or until the borrower’s financial situation improves enough to refinance solo. This is why the calculator above assigns mortgages a “No Release” status in the Release Eligibility panel.
Sometimes — but it’s less standardized than student loans. Some auto lenders offer co-signer release after 12 months of on-time payments, provided the primary borrower meets a minimum credit score (typically 670+) and demonstrates sufficient income to carry the loan alone.
However, most auto lenders do not have a formal co-signer release program. The more reliable exit strategies for auto loan co-signers are:
- Refinance: The borrower refinances the auto loan in their name only (most common after 12–24 months of on-time payments with an improved credit score)
- Accelerated payoff: Make extra principal payments to pay off the loan faster
- Trade-in: The borrower trades in the vehicle and gets a new auto loan independently (if credit has improved)
A divorce decree does NOT release you from a co-signed loan. This is one of the most common and painful misconceptions. A divorce agreement is a contract between you and your ex-spouse — it does not bind the lender. Even if the divorce decree states that your ex is responsible for the debt, the lender can still pursue you for the full amount because you signed the original loan agreement.
The only ways out:
- Refinance: Your ex must refinance the loan in their name alone
- Payoff: Negotiate as part of the divorce settlement that the asset is sold and loan paid off
- Court enforcement: If your ex violates the divorce decree (fails to make payments they agreed to), you can petition the court to hold them in contempt — but you’re still liable to the lender in the meantime
A personal guarantee on a business loan is functionally identical to co-signing — you pledge your personal assets (home equity, savings, investments) to guarantee a business debt. The key differences:
- No co-debtor stay: If the borrower files Chapter 13 bankruptcy, the co-debtor stay (§1301) does NOT apply to business debts. The lender can pursue your personal assets immediately.
- Unlimited or limited: Some personal guarantees are “unlimited” (you’re liable for everything), while others can be negotiated as “limited” (capped at a percentage or dollar amount)
- SBA loans: All SBA 7(a) and 504 loans require personal guarantees from anyone with 20%+ ownership in the business. If someone asks you to co-sign their SBA loan, you’re signing a personal guarantee.
- No release: Personal guarantees on business loans generally cannot be released until the loan is fully repaid or the business refinances without your guarantee
The calculator above switches to “Business Loan / Personal Guarantee” mode when you select the Business loan type — it disables the co-debtor stay and activates the personal asset exposure warnings.
You cannot co-sign a federal student loan. Federal student loans (Direct Subsidized, Direct Unsubsidized, Grad PLUS) are issued directly by the U.S. Department of Education and do not require or accept co-signers. The only exception is the Parent PLUS loan, where the parent is the primary borrower — not a co-signer.
Private student loans (from banks, credit unions, and lenders like Sallie Mae, Discover, College Ave) frequently require co-signers, especially for students with limited credit history. For private student loans:
- Co-signer release is available from most lenders after 12–36 months of on-time payments
- The co-signer’s income and credit are used to qualify for better rates
- Private student loans have no income-driven repayment plans or Public Service Loan Forgiveness
- Deferment on private loans typically means interest still accrues and capitalizes — growing the balance
Yes — and the risks are similar to co-signing a loan. When you co-sign (or “guarantee”) a lease, you become legally responsible for the full lease obligation — which includes rent, late fees, property damage beyond the security deposit, and early termination fees. Your liability can include:
- Full remaining rent: If the tenant breaks the lease with 8 months remaining at $1,500/month, you could owe up to $12,000 (depending on state mitigation laws)
- Property damage: Costs exceeding the security deposit become your responsibility
- Legal fees: If the landlord sues for unpaid rent, you can be named in the lawsuit
- Credit impact: Some landlords report to credit bureaus; all collection accounts will appear on your report
Unlike loan co-signing, lease guarantees do not typically appear on your credit report unless the account goes to collections. However, the legal liability is just as real.
There are several ways to help someone get a loan or build credit without putting your financial future at risk:
| Alternative | Your Liability | DTI Impact | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Add as authorized user on your credit card | $0 (your card, your control) | None | Building credit for thin-file borrowers |
| Help them get a secured credit card | $0 | None | Establishing independent credit history |
| Help them get a credit-builder loan (credit union) | $0 | None | Building installment loan history |
| Gift money for a larger down payment | Gift amount only | None | Reducing loan amount (lower rate, no co-signer) |
| Direct personal loan with written agreement | Loan amount (controlled) | None (not reported) | When you want to help directly with a capped amount |
| Help them negotiate with the lender | $0 | None | Exploring rate reductions, different loan products |
When you add someone as an authorized user on your credit card, your card’s entire payment history, credit limit, and utilization ratio get added to their credit report. This is 100% legal under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) and is one of the fastest ways to build someone’s credit score.
How it works:
- Call your credit card issuer and add the person as an authorized user
- You do NOT have to give them the physical card — lock it in a drawer or don’t request one
- Your card’s full history (payment record, account age, credit limit) appears on their credit report within 1–2 billing cycles
- A card with 5+ years of on-time payments and under 10% utilization can boost a thin-file score by 40–80 points
- Your liability: $0 extra (you already owe your card balance). Your DTI: unaffected. Your credit: unaffected (unless they spend and you don’t pay)
The key advantage: you can remove them as an authorized user at any time with a single phone call. Try removing yourself from a co-signed $30,000 loan — it’s nearly impossible.
This is the most common co-signing scenario in America and the most emotionally charged decision. Here’s the objective framework:
Before co-signing for your child, verify ALL of these:
- ✅ They have stable employment (W-2, at least 6 months at current job)
- ✅ The monthly payment is under 15% of their gross monthly income
- ✅ They have a checking account with at least 3 months of payments saved
- ✅ Auto-pay will be set up from THEIR account on Day 1
- ✅ You can afford to make every payment yourself for the entire loan term (assume you will)
- ✅ Your DTI after co-signing stays under 36% (check with the calculator above)
- ✅ The loan type offers co-signer release (student loans: yes; mortgages: no)
If ANY of those are “no” — consider the alternatives first: authorized user strategy (3–6 months), secured credit card, credit-builder loan, smaller loan amount, or waiting until their credit independently qualifies.
The calculator uses a weighted heuristic scoring model (0–100) that evaluates six risk factors based on published FICO guidelines, CFPB complaint data, and standard underwriting criteria:
| Factor | Weight | What It Measures |
|---|---|---|
| Borrower’s Credit Score | 0–30 pts | Under 580 = 30 pts (highest risk). 740+ = 4 pts (lowest) |
| Missed Payments (12 mo) | 0–25 pts | 0 missed = 0 pts. 3+ missed = 25 pts |
| Employment Stability | 0–20 pts | W-2 full-time = 0 pts. Unemployed = 20 pts |
| Loan Type Risk | 0–10 pts | Business = 10 pts (highest). Mortgage = 4 pts |
| Relationship Distance | 0–8 pts | Spouse = 1 pt. Friend/business partner = 6–8 pts |
| Loan-to-Income Ratio | 0–7 pts | Loan > 2× annual income = 7 pts |
Score interpretation: 0–25 = Low Risk, 26–50 = Medium Risk, 51–72 = High Risk, 73–100 = Very High Risk. The score is an educational estimate — not a guaranteed default probability.
Related U.S. Credit & Debt Calculators
Legal Disclaimer, CFPB Guidelines & Federal Law References
Please read this disclaimer carefully before using this calculator for any co-signing decision, credit planning, bankruptcy assessment, or legal strategy.
All results generated by this Co-Signer Risk & Liability Calculator are for educational and informational purposes only. They do not constitute financial advice, legal counsel, credit counseling, bankruptcy guidance, or any form of licensed professional recommendation. No attorney-client, CPA, credit counselor, or fiduciary relationship is created by using this tool. Always consult a licensed attorney, financial advisor, or credit counselor before co-signing any loan, making bankruptcy decisions, or taking legal action related to co-signed debt obligations.
All outputs — including the Co-Signer Risk Score (0–100), Maximum Liability Exposure, Debt-to-Income Impact, Borrowing Power Lost, Credit Score Impact Estimates, Bankruptcy Protection Analysis, Co-Signer Release Eligibility, and Alternative Strategy Recommendations — are mathematical estimates based entirely on the data you enter. USFinanceCalculators.com cannot verify the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of your inputs. Actual lender decisions, credit score impacts, legal outcomes, and collection actions may differ materially from this tool’s projections based on your specific financial circumstances, state laws, and lender policies.
Credit score impact estimates shown in this calculator are general approximations based on published FICO scoring model behavior and publicly available credit education materials. They are not actual FICO® scores, VantageScore® calculations, or credit bureau outputs. Actual credit impact depends on your complete credit profile, scoring model version (FICO 8, FICO 9, FICO 10, VantageScore 3.0/4.0), mix of tradelines, payment history, utilization, account age, and other factors unique to your credit file. Co-signed loan activity is reported identically on both the borrower’s and co-signer’s credit reports per Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), 15 U.S.C. § 1681 requirements.
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General Disclaimer: USFinanceCalculators.com provides this Co-Signer Risk & Liability Calculator as a free educational tool. Risk score methodology, liability exposure calculations, and default probability estimates are based on publicly available data from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), published FICO scoring guidelines, and consumer finance research. The 75% co-signer payment statistic referenced in this tool is sourced from FTC consumer education materials and state consumer protection agencies. Actual default rates, collection outcomes, and co-signer liability vary based on loan type, borrower behavior, lender policies, and individual circumstances. No specific outcome is guaranteed.
Joint & Several Liability Disclaimer: This calculator models the legal principle of joint and several liability, which applies to most co-signed loans in all 50 U.S. states. Under this principle, each party (borrower and co-signer) is independently liable for 100% of the debt — not a proportional share. Lenders are not legally required to pursue the primary borrower before collecting from the co-signer. The specific application of joint and several liability may vary by state law, loan agreement terms, and debt type (consumer vs. commercial). This calculator provides a general educational model — consult an attorney licensed in your state for advice specific to your situation.
Bankruptcy & Co-Debtor Stay Analysis: The bankruptcy protection analysis in this calculator references provisions of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (Title 11, United States Code). The Chapter 13 co-debtor stay is governed by 11 U.S.C. § 1301 and applies only to consumer debts — not business debts, SBA loans, or personal guarantees on commercial obligations. The Chapter 7 discharge provision referenced is governed by 11 U.S.C. § 524(e), which states that discharge of the debtor’s obligation does not affect the liability of any other entity (including co-signers). Bankruptcy law is complex, jurisdiction-specific, and subject to judicial interpretation. This calculator’s analysis is a simplified educational model — always consult a licensed bankruptcy attorney before making any bankruptcy-related decisions.
FTC Credit Practices Rule & Co-Signer Notice: This calculator references the FTC’s Credit Practices Rule (16 CFR § 444.3), which requires creditors to provide a written “Notice to Cosigner” before a co-signer becomes obligated on a consumer credit transaction. The notice must inform the co-signer of their potential liability. Failure by a lender to provide this notice constitutes a regulatory violation but does not necessarily void the co-signer’s obligation on the underlying debt. State laws may provide additional co-signer protections beyond the federal Credit Practices Rule.
Co-Signer Release Estimates: Co-signer release eligibility information (payment requirements, lender policies, and release timelines) presented in this calculator is based on publicly available lender program information as of 2026. Lender policies change frequently without notice. Specific release requirements vary by lender, loan type, borrower creditworthiness, and account standing. The statement that “mortgages have no co-signer release” reflects the absence of standardized mortgage co-signer release programs among conventional, FHA, VA, and USDA lenders — borrowers must refinance to remove a co-signer from a mortgage. Always verify current release requirements directly with your specific lender.
DTI & Borrowing Power Calculations: Debt-to-Income (DTI) ratio calculations use standard underwriting methodology where the full monthly payment of the co-signed loan is counted as the co-signer’s debt. The “Borrowing Power Lost” estimate uses a simplified qualification model based on conventional mortgage DTI limits (typically 36–43% for conventional loans, up to 50% for FHA with compensating factors). Actual qualification depends on lender-specific guidelines, compensating factors, loan programs, credit score requirements, and other underwriting criteria not modeled in this calculator.
Wage Garnishment & Collection Disclaimer: Wage garnishment limits referenced in this calculator are based on the federal Consumer Credit Protection Act (CCPA), which limits garnishment to 25% of disposable earnings or the amount exceeding 30 times the federal minimum wage, whichever is less. Four states (Texas, South Carolina, Pennsylvania, and North Carolina) provide additional garnishment protections for consumer debts. State garnishment laws vary significantly and may provide greater protection than federal law. Collection actions, statutes of limitations, and legal remedies available to creditors vary by state and debt type. This calculator does not provide state-specific legal advice.
No Warranty: USFinanceCalculators.com makes no representations or warranties, express or implied, regarding the accuracy, completeness, reliability, or fitness for any particular purpose of this calculator or its outputs. Use of this tool is at your sole risk. To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law, USFinanceCalculators.com expressly disclaims all liability for any financial loss, credit damage, legal consequence, or adverse outcome arising directly or indirectly from reliance on this tool’s results or the decision to co-sign or decline to co-sign any loan.
External Links: Links to government websites (FTC.gov, CFPB.gov, Congress.gov, IRS.gov, AnnualCreditReport.com, etc.) are provided for reference and educational context only. USFinanceCalculators.com is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or operated by any U.S. government agency, regulatory body, lender, credit bureau, or financial institution.
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USFinanceCalculators.com is a fully independent platform built exclusively for U.S. consumers, families facing co-signer decisions, and financial professionals who deserve transparent, institutional-grade financial tools without paywalls, vendor bias, or hidden agendas. Our Co-Signer Risk & Liability Calculator is the only free U.S. tool that combines a weighted risk score (0–100), maximum lifetime liability exposure, DTI & borrowing power impact, credit score damage estimates, Chapter 7 vs. Chapter 13 bankruptcy protection analysis, co-signer release eligibility by lender, and safer alternative strategies — all in one comprehensive assessment. Risk methodology incorporates data from the FTC Credit Practices Rule (16 CFR § 444.3), published FICO scoring guidelines, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). Bankruptcy analysis references 11 U.S.C. § 524(e) (Chapter 7 discharge limitations) and 11 U.S.C. § 1301 (Chapter 13 co-debtor stay). Credit reporting obligations follow the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA, 15 U.S.C. § 1681). We have no affiliation with any lender, debt collector, credit bureau, bankruptcy attorney, credit repair company, or financial institution — our math is neutral, our tools are always free, and your data never leaves your browser.