Townsville Bulletin

$100,000 the price of access to a QLD house

- ELIZABETH TILLEY

HOUSEHOLDS earning less than $100,000 a year have been priced out of buying a home in nearly three quarters of Queensland suburbs, as housing affordabil­ity continues to worsen.

Exclusive new research reveals a staggering 722 suburbs across the state now require a yearly household income of more than $100,000 after tax to afford a home, even in once affordable locations like Gympie, Toowoomba, and Ipswich.

More than 200 suburbs now require households to earn $200,000 or more to buy an average home, including the outer Brisbane suburbs of Aspley, Banyo, Coopers Plains, and Runcorn.

There were also 70 suburbs across the state which now require a household income of more than $300,000 a year to afford an average home, including Sunshine Beach, New Farm and Ascot.

The figures show the situation has deteriorat­ed sharply since the start of the year, with the cost of living outpacing wages growth and home prices still rising in many suburbs.

Nine months ago, only 391 suburbs required a household after-tax income of $100,000, and just 65 needed a household income of more than $200,000 a year.

It comes as the Reserve Bank increased rates for the seventh straight month on Tuesday.

Comparison site Finder.com.au crunched the numbers using home price and loan data and revealed the household incomes needed to buy a typical house or unit in every Queensland suburb.

It assumed the buyer purchased at the median price, was given an average loan rate and wanted to avoid “mortgage stress” — defined as spending more than a third of their income on repayments.

Tax office and Australian Bureau of Statistics data varied on exactly what constitute­d the “average” Queensland income, but it was in the realm of $105,000 a year for a household.

Finder.com.au head of consumer research Graham Cooke said the salaries required to purchase property in many areas painted a “grim” picture of deteriorat­ing affordabil­ity.

“The costs of living are increasing faster than people’s salaries and housing is the biggest component of that. A lot of households are struggling,” Mr Cooke said.

“Australia escaped the global financial crisis to a degree, so this is really the first time it’s in this kind of situation.

“These figures may be pretty shocking to some, with the average price increase across all suburbs sitting at 13 per cent. This has added thousands of dollars to the average salary required to afford a home in most cases.”

Soaring lending costs are also a risk for households who fixed their interest rates at rock bottom levels over recent years and are set to see their fixed term expire sometime in the next 18 months.

“So far we haven’t seen the full impact of rate rises, but when the fixed rates expire that’s when the floodgates will open,” Mr Cooke said.

He suggested homeowners on fixed rates pay down as much of their principal as possible before their rates rise or save aggressive­ly to build up a cash buffer.

Households who spent more than 30 per cent of their income on housing costs were said to be in mortgage stress — a position where repaying their loans was difficult, Mr Cooke said.

He pointed to Finder.com.au surveys that showed the proportion of households who reported their repayments or rents were causing them “stress” had risen from 25 per cent a few years ago to nearly 50 per cent.

“It’s made a huge impact,” Mr Cooke said. “It’s unclear what the path out of this situation is for most households. The only positive is that the Reserve Bank may pause rising rates for a while to evaluate their impact.”

The Queensland suburbs where the highest incomes are needed to buy a home start with the exclusive Noosa suburb of Sunshine Beach, with households there needing to take home$606,449 a year after tax to afford monthly mortgage repayments on a house of $15,161.

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