An innovative house and land finance package developed in Perth could help more first-homebuyers to secure a home loan reduce their loan repayments.
Based on a four-bedroom, two-bathroom home using part of the home as a rental, therfore allowing first-homebuyers to afford a buy, part of the home is sealed off from the rest, creating a rentable one-bedroom, one-bathroom home.
The rent is taken into account when assessing borrowing capacity and surplus income can be used for bigger mortgage repayments.
Housing Edge director Dennis Ward-Fay said the new approach would bring home ownership within the reach of many more first-homebuyers.
“Every application has to be assessed on its own merits but as an example the top four banks would require a couple borrowing for a house and land package valued at $380,000 to be earning an average salary of $63,275. The same couple applying for a Housing Edge loan would require a combined salary of only $56,510.
“The home can easily be converted back to a standard four-bedroom, two-bathroom home at a later date if the owners wish,” he said.
Homeowners are advised to use a property manager to handle the rent collection and tenancy details.
Posts Tagged ‘surplus’
First-homebuyers urged to take mortgage help on board
Posted in Realestate and Home Loans, Uncategorized, tagged $380, 000, account, afford, allowing, assessing, based, bigger mortgage repayments, borrowers, borrowing, built-in, buyers, capacity, combined salary, concept, creating, criteria, Dennis Ward-Fay, developed, dollars, finance, first, first-homebuyers, four-bedroom, handle, help, home, home loan, home ownership, house, house and land, Housing Edge director, Housing Edge loan, income stream, income., innovative, land, land package, lending, lending criteria, loan, major banks, manager, mortgage, new approach, new home, one-bathroom home., one-bedroom, own, package, Part, payback, payback period, period, perth, popular, potential, property manager, qualify, Real Estate and Home Loans, reduce, reduces, rent, rent collection, rentable, rented, repayment period., repayments, rest, salary, saving thousands, sealed, secure, struggling, substantially, surplus, tenancy, tenants, traditional mortgage, two-bathroom, Uncategorized, valued on May 26, 2009| 1 Comment »
Troy Buswell delivers $647m surplus to WA
Posted in Political News, tagged $100 million, $513 million, $647 million, 2011/12, 2012., achieve, across, audit, Australia's, billion, booming, boost, broader, budget, Budget since the, centres., committee, commodities, Commonwealth, deficit., delivered, delivering, down, downward, Economic, efficiency., election, Eric Rippe, Fiona Stanley Hospital, first, forward estimates, fully, funding police, global economy has been in decline, government, Government's, grants, GST, handed, hit, improved, large, last year, Liberal, Liberal Government, mining, money prisons, Mr Buswell said., new hospitals, offset, payroll, performance, Political News, power, prison, prison beds, projected, promised, promises, pump, r delivered, reform, regional, revenue, revisions, royalties, second, sector, stage, State, strategies, surplus, tax, tax rebate, Taxation, the state, today, Treasurer, Troy Buswell, tune, warning, western on May 14, 2009| Leave a Comment »
WESTERN Australia’s Liberal Government has handed down its first Budget, delivering a $647 million surplus but warning the state will be in deficit by 2012.
Treasurer Troy Buswell today delivered his first Budget since the Liberal Government came to power last year.
He said the 2008/09 surplus of $647 million would shrink to $409 million in 2009/10, and just $23 million the following year.
By 2011/12 the state will be in deficit to the tune of $513 million.
“Over the past months, as the global economy has been in decline, the state has been hit by large downward revisions to projected taxation revenue, GST grants from the Commonwealth and mining royalties,” Mr Buswell told parliament.
“Since the mid-year review, the Budget has lost a massive $4 billion in forecast revenue from these sources.”
Last year, then treasurer Eric Ripper delivered a surplus of more than $2 billion on the back of a booming commodities sector.
Economic growth remained high at 8 per cent for the 2008/09 financial year.
But forecasts predicted growth would fall into negative territory in 2009/10, with unemployment expected to peak, and business investment to fall by 17.5 per cent.
Mr Buswell said the Government would provide a one-year payroll tax rebate to small businesses with payrolls of up to $3.2 million to help protect jobs.
“Some 6,700 small businesses will be eligible for this payroll tax rebate, which will fully offset payroll tax for around 68,000 employees,” he said.
“The cost of this rebate is estimated at $100 million.”
A $47 million jobs training and skills package, and a $8.3 billion spend on infrastructure in the next financial year are key components of the Budget.
Mr Buswell said law and order were also strong focuses, in line with the Government’s election promises to boost funding for police and pump more money into prisons
Mr Buswell said the Government’s election promise to toughen up sentencing laws and introduce mandatory sentencing for people who assault police was underpinned in the Budget by a significant investment in prison capacity.
A total of $655 million will be invested in 2012/13 to create an extra 1657 prison beds across the state.
A record $5.1 billion spend on health services in the next year – rising 5.9 per cent, or $282 million from last year – will include the fast tracking of forward works for a new children’s hospital, the construction stage of the Fiona Stanley Hospital, and new hospitals in two regional centres.
Mr Buswell said the Government would push ahead with public sector reforms in a bid to achieve improved performance and efficiency.
The first stage of the economic audit committee promised by the Government during the last election was complete and a range of hard decisions had delivered $7.6 billion over the forward estimates, Mr Buswell said.
“I am looking forward to the second stage of the economic audit to identify strategies for broader reform over the longer term, so we can ensure the budget stays in surplus,” he said.