No quick save for a first home deposit

Canstar analysis shows workers on an average wage have to slog away for years to save a home deposit.

Singles on an average income have no hope of quickly saving a deposit to buy their first home, particularly in Sydney.

Getting a deposit together quickly is probably unrealistic even for couples where both partners earn the average wage, unless their parents can help out with the deposit or act as a guarantor on the home loan, Canstar finance editor Justine Davies says.

"The percentage of salary that would need to be set aside to get into the housing market quickly is very unrealistic for most people," Ms Davies said.

"You might be able to do the hard yards for a couple of years and get a five to 10 per cent deposit but to try and to do that to achieve a 20 per cent deposit I think for most people is going to be unrealistic."

A Sydney couple on average wages would have to set aside 41 per cent of their net income to get a five per cent deposit together in a year, research from Canstar shows.

Extending that to a standard 20 per cent deposit would take several years, unless the couple can get a kick-start from their parents.

"Really I think a 20 per cent deposit, unless you receive a financial windfall or you have an extremely well-paying job, you both have extremely well-paying jobs, it's really not achievable for first home buyers," Ms Davies said.

The situation is even more dire for singles: a Sydney man would have to save 70 per cent of his income and a woman 98 per cent.

Ms Davies said Sydney is by far the most challenging market for first home buyers to break into, followed by Melbourne.

But even elsewhere it would probably take about five years to save a 20 per cent deposit, Ms Davies said.

"If you were determined to save a 20 per cent deposit and you were wanting to buy in Sydney particularly or even Melbourne and you're on an average income then I think in order to pay your other expenses you're going to be looking at at least six, seven, eight years to get a 20 per cent deposit," Ms Davies said.

A couple on average incomes would have to save 29 per cent of their net pay towards a deposit in Melbourne while in Brisbane it is 26 per cent, the Canstar research shows.

Ms Davies said that was probably a more sustainable amount to be able to put aside but it would still be difficult on an average income.

Canstar is a financial comparison site.


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Source: AAP


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