Home Loan Affordability report
nterest.co.nz Home Loan Affordability
report
For May 2017
- for immediate release
Saving a 20% deposit for a
lower-priced home in Auckland would take from 6.3 years to
8.7 years for typical first home buyers on median
incomes
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PLEASE
NOTE: The new Reports covering a) First home
buyers (aged 25-29 yrs), as a couple, b) second rung Young
family buyers (aged 30-34), as a couple (with one partner
working full time, one half time, and a 5 year old child),
and c) second rung older families (aged 35-39) are now
published on our website.
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Typical first
home buyers in Auckland would have to save for an average of
more than seven years to get a 20% deposit for their first
home, according to interest.co.nz's latest Home Loan Affordability Reports.
In
Wellington, typical first home buyers could save a 20%
deposit in just over four years, and in Canterbury it would
take 3.8 years.
The figures show just how far out of
reach home ownership is becoming for aspiring first home
buyers on average wages in Auckland.
The Home Loan
Affordability Reports track the median take home pay of
couples aged 25-29 in each region, if both were working full
time, and then estimates how much money they would save if
they put aside 20% of their after tax pay each week, and
earned interest on their savings at the 90 day term deposit
rate.
It then calculates how long it would take them to
save a 20% deposit for a home at the REINZ's lower quartile
selling price in each region.
That shows that it would
take 7.3 years to save a 20% deposit in Auckland, where the
REINZ's lower quartile selling price was $665,000 in May,
compared to just two years in Southland, where the lower
quartile selling price was just $174,000 in May (see table
below for all regions).
Within the Auckland Region the
cheapest places to buy a first home were the Papakura and
Franklin districts on the city's southern fringes, where the
lower quartile prices were $570,000 and $575,000
respectively in May.
That means it would take typical
first home buyers 6.3 years to save a 20% deposit for a
lower quartile-priced home in Papakura or Franklin.
The
most expensive area for first home buyers in Auckland was
the North Shore, where it would take 8.7 years for typical
first home buyers to save a 20% deposit on a home at the
North Shore's lower quartile selling price of
$792,500.
According to the Home Loan Affordability
Reports ,the median after-tax pay for Auckland couples aged
25-29 is $1590.83 a week.
If they saved 20% of that each
week ($318.17) to put towards a deposit, they would have
$1272.66 left between them ($636.33 each), from which they
would have to pay all of their living expenses including
rent, so they wouldn't be living a lavish lifestyle.
That
assumes they have no children and do not receive the Working
for Families allowance and do not make KiwiSaver
contributions or student loan repayments, which would affect
their ability to save for a deposit.
Welcome Home
Loans
However first home buyers may be eligible
for a Welcome Home Loan which would only require a 10%
deposit, a scheme which is administered by Housing New
Zealand, although the mortgages come from a mainstream bank
or other lender.
To be eligible a couple would need to
earn less than $130,000 a year between them (before tax),
and in Auckland the maximum price of their property they
were purchasing would be $650,000 for a brand new home or
$600,000 for an older home.
The gross income of the
typical first home buyers used in the Home Loan
Affordability Reports is $101,400 a year, so they would be
eligible for the Welcome Home Loan, allowing them to buy a
home for up $650,000 if it was brand new, or $600,000 if it
was older, with a 10% deposit (up to $60,000 or $65,000
depending on the age of the property).
However there are
some disadvantages to such an arrangement, the main ones
being that it increases the size of the borrower's mortgage
from 80% to 90% of the purchase price, which would also
increase the amount of their mortgage payments.
It is
also likely to restrict where they could buy a property
because Pukekohe and Franklin are the only districts within
the Auckland region where the median selling price is below
$650,000, and many, if not most of the new homes that are
being built are priced at the middle to upper end of the
market, putting them beyond the reach of most first home
buyers.
So it's likely that even if they qualify for a
mortgage with a 10% deposit, they may have difficulty
finding a home that they would want to live in and that they
could afford.
http://www.interest.co.nz/property/88363/saving-20-deposit-lower-priced-home-auckland-would-take-63-years-87-years-typical