thread: What do you think is an "average" home loan amount these days???

  1. #19
    Registered User

    Jan 2009
    5,235

    It's all relative to where you live of course. If you are in the city - one of the bigger ones I'd say the average would be around the $400 000 mark. If you are rural, in my area, the average would be around $200 000 or less.
    My mortgage 10 years ago was $70 000 in a rural area.


    Like all averages, there are some huge variances to get that average.

  2. #20
    Registered User
    Add ~clover~ on Facebook

    Sep 2007
    travelling
    9,557

    I was going to say around 300 000 Aust wide. I lived in a small town on the East coast & the low end was 220 000 - 300 000, but here in a small South WA town, the priciest house in town is $130 000. There's a cheaper one here for only 60 000 & its not a bad place.

  3. #21
    Registered User

    Aug 2006
    On the other side of this screen!!!
    11,129

    What do you think is an "average" home loan amount these days???

    I would like to point out that, yes, house prices might seem higher in some areas, but also that a lot of houses in my area that young couples purchase are not the typical "first home" fare. +study, +separate dining, +family room/rumpus/2nd living area, +2 door garage, +ensuite, +extra bedroom(s) are all features that are not found in starter-uppers. Interestingly though, many young people now expect their first home to have some or all of these features (AND be pretty too). In the meantime, developers & investors come through snapping up all the more modest homes, slap a cheap facelift on them, then onsell or rent at an inflated cost while laughing all the way to the bank.

    I blame those bloody home renovation tv shows for selling us all a dream that is bankrupting the nation's affordable housing stock [/RANT].

  4. #22
    Moderator

    Oct 2004
    In my Zombie proof fortress.
    6,449

    We are rural in a crappy old farm house, so our mortgage is only $140k, will go up to $300k when we rebuild on this block. Which is probably on par with the area and a reasonable home.

  5. #23
    Registered User

    Mar 2008
    North Northcote
    8,065

    MD: this is what is happening 2 houses down. there was this 1 bedroom run-down victorian that the owners sold for about $550k!! INSANE. all the young coupkes came through, but it was too exxy for what it was so now we have 'professional renovators' that got it and are flipping it. now they will sell it for something in the mid 700k mark...kinda sucks to see ppl getting pushed out of the market like that by crazy housing prices.

    back to OP...i would think that $400k would be pretty average for melbourne?? we are about that and had a 25% deposit for our 2 bdr place.

  6. #24
    Registered User

    Jul 2010
    Melbourne
    2,737

    I would say around $300-350 is average. When we buy i won't be going over $320, I still want to be able to pay a mortgage off without eating tins of baked beans for the rest of my life! Where we would be looking you can still get a nice 3 bedroom home for around that. We live about 50km from the CBD, but we have everything here, shopping centers, train station, freeway, lakes.

  7. #25
    Registered User

    Jan 2006
    country victoria
    1,055

    Re: What do you think is an "average" home loan amount these days???

    Astrid i hear you. We live in a crappy old farm house. Decision is do wd renovate or rebuild. Both will cost around $300000

  8. #26
    Registered User

    Oct 2006
    In a house, on a hill with a big fat welcome mat!
    6,772

    What do you think is an "average" home loan amount these days???

    We live in a crappy old house on acres too. I just can't at this point justify bumping our mortgage up to rebuild. Our current mortgage is well under what I would think is average. Most people we know have between 350-400k as the average.

  9. #27
    BellyBelly Member

    Jan 2010
    2,793

    As N2L said, there is a difference between mortgage amount and house prices. I think I read recently that the average mortgage is somewhere in the 300s (don't remember the exact amount). Yes, some areas are much more expensive, but as others have said, I guess you'd generally expect that people buying in those areas have much more deposit to put towards it.

  10. #28
    Registered User

    Aug 2006
    On the other side of this screen!!!
    11,129

    Some hard facts, from The Year Book, 2012:

    Average loan for first home buyers $281,000
    Changeover home buyers average load $326,000 (figures for 2010-11 = most recent national figures).

    Average amount of mortgage outstanding ($,000) 2009-10
    Sydney 239
    NSW bal of state $168
    Melbourne $207
    Vic rest of state $138
    Brisbane $220
    Qld rest of state $202
    Adelaide $180
    SA rest of state $124
    Perth $232
    WA rest of state $172
    Hobart $140
    Tas rest of state $126
    Darwin $247
    NT rest of state $195

  11. #29
    Registered User

    Aug 2006
    On the other side of this screen!!!
    11,129

    Hmmm, double post.
    Last edited by AnyDream; April 1st, 2013 at 03:14 PM.

  12. #30

    DH and I were chatting about our previous loan and what we class as a small/big mortgage, wondering if we are delusional!! I think $300k is average anything under smallish and anything over 4 big!???

    What do you think?
    Yep I'd agree with that. That is what I was thinking when I read your title, but then again I am in Adelaide.

  13. #31
    BellyBelly Member

    Sep 2010
    North West Victoria, Australia
    3,003

    how long ago Char?
    We bought the house (which had been on the market 7 months) in Feb 2012

  14. #32
    Registered User

    Jan 2007
    7,197

    Should have stated, in capital cities/suburbs as rural is a different kettle of fish.

    ABS - from 10/11 - first home owners average mortgage amount is under 300, from memory was around 270, and changeover buyers was around 350,000 (Australian census).

    Average monthly mortgage repayments are $1950 in Vic. (2011 Census).

  15. #33
    BellyBelly Life Subscriber

    Feb 2006
    melbourne
    11,462

    300k seems like it would be average but I know it's not....400k s scary
    The largest ours has been it around 250k, it's under 200k now.

  16. #34
    BellyBelly Life Subscriber

    Feb 2006
    melbourne
    11,462

    300k seems like it would be average but I know it's not....400k s scary
    The largest ours has been it around 250k, it's under 200k now.

  17. #35

    Mar 2004
    Sparta
    12,662

    OK I'm delusional *doh*
    I thought that the average might be about 500k
    Round here 700k buys you a run down house with garden. For a nice house that doesn't need any improvements you'll cough up about 1m.

  18. #36
    BellyBelly Member
    Add xXHopeXx on Facebook

    Jan 2010
    Penrith, NSW
    1,075

    Where i live, (Western Sydney) the average price for a half decent home (3 bedrooms, garage/locked carport, 1 bathroom, backyard, single living room/dining room) is about $400,000-$450,000.

    If you go closer towards Sydney, (about 30 odd minutes away from us) you're looking at about $600,000+ EASY. that's for a much older house, with a smaller block and just a generally smaller house.

    Although i'd love to live closer to the city, i'm SO not willing to pay that much for a house!! :/
    Last edited by xXHopeXx; April 1st, 2013 at 07:04 PM.

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