How Much Can I Borrow on A$75,000/Year in Australia?
Allowing 30% of gross monthly income for housing, a household earning A$75,000 per year has a maximum repayment capacity of A$1875/month. Under APRA's serviceability test at 9.24%, that translates to approximately A$199000 in property value with 10% deposit.
A$199000
Max Property Price
A$1875
Max Monthly Repayment
A$20000
Deposit (10%)
9.24%
Serviceability Rate
Australia's Serviceability Assessment vs. US 28% Rule
APRA Serviceability Buffer (+3%)
Unlike the US DTI-based rules, Australian lenders assess your ability to repay at your actual rate + 3% (or a minimum floor, whichever is higher). At 5.7% actual rate, you must demonstrate affordability at 9.24%. This buffer protects against future rate rises and tightens qualification significantly.
No Rigid DTI Limit — But DTI Caps Apply
Australia does not mandate a single front-end DTI ratio, but most lenders apply internal limits — commonly 6× annual income as a maximum total borrowing. APRA also monitors the proportion of high-DTI lending (above 6×) and can impose macroprudential limits. Lenders also conduct a Household Expenditure Measure (HEM) assessment of your living costs.
Practical guide: Australian lenders typically allow total monthly repayments (all debts) of 30–35% of gross income, subject to the serviceability buffer. On A$75,000, your comfortable repayment ceiling is roughly A$1875/month before other debts.
Australian Borrowing Calculator
Maximum Property Price
A$199000
Based on 30% income rule at 9.24% serviceability rate, 10% deposit
LMI Required
With a 10% deposit, your LVR exceeds 80% and Lenders Mortgage Insurance (LMI) is required. LMI can be capitalised into your loan and typically costs A$5,000–A$20,000+ depending on the loan size and LVR tier.