Bank of Mum and Dad
- Gerrard
- Feb 17
- 4 min read
This reliance on parents to enter the property market is making home ownership in Australia hereditary, says Peter Tulip, chief economist at the Centre for Independent Studies.
“Unless you have wealthy parents, it is very difficult to get onto the first rung of the home-ownership ladder.
“People without access to finance are trapped in the rental sector, whereas the children of wealthy parents often have the huge hurdle of getting a deposit paid for them or lent to them.
“They get substantial parental assistance to get their first foot up,” Tulip says.
“That is making us look more and more like a society from the 19th century, with an elite landed gentry passing their wealth and privilege onto future generations. And it’s fundamentally unequal and unattractive.”
In the past five years, the cost of housing has skyrocketed. Even entry-level property (considered to be in the 25th percentile) has seen tremendous price growth of up to 61.7 per cent, particularly in cities like Brisbane, Adelaide, Perth and, to a lesser extent, Sydney, according to the Domain First Home Buyer Report.
Due to the rapidly growing prices, more than 60 per cent of first-home buyers have received help from their parents (often referred to as the bank of mum and dad), according to Finder’s 2023 Consumer Sentiment Tracker data.
On average, first-home buyers receive $33,278 from their parents towards a deposit, according to the data.
And 2021 findings from the Productivity Commission showed that if the bank of mum and dad were an actual lender, they’d be between the fifth and ninth biggest mortgage lender in Australia.
“As prices rise, it restricts access to home ownership to people with wealth, and it’s only by having wealthy parents that young people can access the deposit required for a house in Australia,” says Tulip.
A whole generation of buyers will be segmented by how wealthy – or not wealthy – their parents are, says Peter Tulip. Photo: Ray White Upper North Shore
“A worry is that if [the bank of mum and Dad] becomes a self-sustaining process that rich people pass on their wealth to their children, then they block out less privileged children from the housing market.”
Unless there are policy changes to slow down property prices, in the future, only first-home buyers who already have parents in the Australian property market will be able to receive the financial help required to buy a home, says Tulip.
The median house price in Australia is $1,154,394, according to Domain data. Assuming the buyer saves up a 20 per cent deposit, that’s a median deposit of $230,878.
Domain First Home Buyer Report
Capital City | Median House Price | 20 per cent deposit |
Sydney | $1,662,448.00 | $332,489.60 |
Melbourne | $1,068,805.00 | $213,761.00 |
Brisbane | $976,464.00 | $195,292.80 |
Adelaide | $929,972.00 | $185,994.40 |
Canberra | $1,041,432.00 | $208,286.40 |
Perth | $852,240.00 | $170,448.00 |
Hobart | $686,053.00 | $137,210.60 |
Darwin | $585,047.00 | $117,009.40 |
Combined capitals | $1,154,394.00 | $230,878.80 |
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