Property Purchase Loans

How Much Can You Borrow To Buy Property?

Quick answer

Borrowing capacity is driven by

6x DTI watchpoint

Income, debts, expenses, deposit and lender policy all matter

  • Typical pre-approval 3 to 6 months
  • Serviceability buffer 3 percentage points
  • Common loan term Up to 30 years
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Your borrowing capacity is the amount a lender is prepared to let you borrow to buy property. In Australia, that figure is usually based on verified income, existing debts, living costs, credit conduct, deposit or equity, and the lender’s assessment of whether the repayments would still be manageable if interest rates were higher.

A strong borrowing position is not just about earning more. Lower debts, cleaner conduct, a larger deposit and realistic living expenses can all improve how much you may be able to borrow, while some buyers may also be able to purchase with less than 20 percent deposit under selected lender or government supported pathways.

Detailed explained

Borrowing capacity is not a single universal number. Each lender uses its own policy, calculator and risk settings to decide the maximum loan amount it may offer. Two borrowers with the same income can receive different outcomes depending on their deposit, liabilities, dependants, credit conduct, loan product, property type and the lender chosen.

How property loan interest rates work

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    Gross and usable income are assessed first, but lenders usually shade some types of income such as overtime, bonuses, commission or rent

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    Existing repayments including credit cards, car loans, HECS or HELP, personal loans and other mortgages can reduce capacity

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    Living expenses, dependants and household commitments are factored into serviceability and can materially change the result

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    A larger deposit or stronger equity position can improve options, reduce risk and sometimes lower the total cost of borrowing

    • BORROWING SNAPSHOT

    • High DTI lending

      6x income or more
    • Lower deposit lending

      may be possible
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    Borrowing range varies

    The lender, product and property can all change the final amount available

How the approval process works

Pre-Approval

01

Review your income, debts, expenses and deposit to estimate an affordable borrowing range

Property

02

Choose a property within that range and make sure the type and location fit lender policy

Valuation

03

The lender may value the property to confirm the security supports the loan amount sought

Settlement

04

Formal approval follows once serviceability, documents and security are acceptable and loan documents are completed

What lenders look at

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Income

Base salary, self employment income, rent and other acceptable income sources may all be assessed differently

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Existing debts

Credit cards, car finance, personal loans, student debt and other mortgages can materially reduce capacity

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Living expenses and dependants

Household spending, number of dependants and ongoing commitments affect serviceability

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Deposit or equity position

A stronger cash contribution or usable equity can improve lender choice and loan structure

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Credit conduct and repayment history

Clear repayment behaviour and a cleaner credit profile usually support a stronger application

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Property type, condition and location

Some properties attract tighter policy settings, lower LVRs or fewer lender options

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APRA DTI limit from 1 February 2026

APRA requires ADIs to limit new residential lending at debt to income ratios of 6 times or more to 20 percent of new owner occupier lending and 20 percent of new investor lending.

From contract to settlement

  • 01. After formal approval, you sign loan documents and satisfy any final conditions before settlement
  • 02. Your solicitor or conveyancer coordinates with the lender, seller and other parties to prepare settlement
  • 03. On settlement day, the lender provides funds, title transfers and the mortgage is registered against the property
  • 03. Settlement is often around 30 to 90 days after contract signing, although the exact date is negotiated in the contract

Common problems

Borrowing capacity can look strong at first glance and still fall short once a lender applies its policy. Problems often arise when debts are understated, expenses are higher than expected, or the property does not fit standard policy

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Income not used in full

Not every dollar earned is always counted at 100 percent. Variable income, overtime, bonuses and some rental income may be shaded, reducing the final borrowing amount.

Possible solutions include:

  • iconUse the most accurate recent income evidence available
  • iconReduce reliance on short term or irregular income where possible
  • iconConsider lenders with policy better suited to your income type
  • iconAdjust the purchase budget to a realistic serviceability range
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Debt and expense pressure

A loan can be reduced or declined when existing repayments, household spending or dependant costs leave too little surplus income.

Possible solutions include:

  • iconReduce or close unused credit limits where appropriate
  • iconRepay short term debts that weigh heavily on serviceability
  • iconPresent clear and accurate living expenses
  • iconConsider a smaller loan amount or larger deposit
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Property or policy mismatch

Some properties are harder to finance because of location, size, condition, zoning or valuation issues, which can lower the maximum loan available.

Possible solutions include:

  • iconCheck lender appetite for the property type early
  • iconOrder or review valuation evidence where appropriate
  • iconUse a larger deposit if policy is tighter on the property
  • iconChoose a lender whose policy suits the security

Steps to get Finance

Step

01

Check your likely borrowing capacity before searching so your budget matches lender policy.
Step

02

Gather payslips, tax returns, bank statements and debt information for a realistic assessment.
Step

03

Reduce avoidable debts or unused credit limits if they are dragging down serviceability.
Step

04

Choose a property that fits both your budget and the lender’s security requirements.
Step

05

Submit the application and complete valuation, approval and loan documents.
Step

06

Proceed to settlement once formal approval is issued and all conditions are met.
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Speak with a Property Finance Specialist

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Borrowing capacity can vary significantly depending on your income, existing debts, household spending, deposit size and the property you want to buy.

A specialist can review your position and help identify which lenders may be better suited to your borrowing range and purchase scenario.

Speak with a finance specialist about your property borrowing capacity

Submit the short form below and a property finance specialist will review your scenario and discuss possible borrowing options.

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