The Cairns Post

First-home buyers back in housing market

- SOPHIE ELSWORTH

FALLING interest rates, subdued house prices and an easing of lending rules have given firsthome buyers a new opportunit­y to crack into the market.

The latest CoreLogic data shows the proportion of firsthome buyers signing up to owneroccup­ier loans reached 28.5 per cent in May – the highest proportion since 2012.

This follows a low of 19.5 per cent in 2015.

Aussie Home Loans chief executive officer James Symond said first-home buyers who had been diligently saving should understand what price range they could afford before they went on the hunt for a home.

“This can be done by searching areas where you want to buy and the prices being paid for apartments and homes,” he said.

“The best rule of thumb is that you can usually borrow about three times your gross annual salary, on top of the deposit you arrange through savings.”

Mr Symond said first-home buyers were “on the move again”, spurred on by falling property prices and various government incentive schemes.

Janna Brown-Greaves, 30, and her husband Matt, 32, have bought a two-bedroom semi-detached home in inner-city Melbourne.

The pair spent more than a year furiously saving, which involved moving back in with Mrs Brown-Greaves’ parents to cut back on their expenses.

“We were cooking more at home, we stopped buying lunches at work every day and I was using the coffee machine at work,” she said. “We didn’t have to pay rent and had no utilities to pay. We were very lucky.”

They put up a deposit of about 12 per cent and Mr BrownGreav­es’s father gave them a small loan to help them get their feet on the property ladder.

They signed up to a mortgage with Westpac and opted for a split loan, fixing half for three years at 3.69 per cent and leaving the rest variable at a rate that is now 3.68 per cent.

ME Bank spokesman Matthew Read said house price falls in cities including Sydney and Melbourne were a good thing for first-home buyers but it was still expensive to break into the market.

“Start saving a deposit as early as possible because it’s important you get into a savings habit,” he said. “It’s such a long journey and you have to hold discipline over a long period. You have to learn the skills and track your savings.”

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Matt and Janna Brown-Greaves moved into their house in June after saving solidly for 12 months. Picture: Ian Currie
FIRST HOME: Matt and Janna Brown-Greaves moved into their house in June after saving solidly for 12 months. Picture: Ian Currie

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