For first homebuyers, it's Labor's Help to Buy versus the Coalition's New Home Guarantee. Which is better?
- Written by Rachel Ong ViforJ, ARC Future Fellow & Professor of Economics, Curtin University
Each side is offering something for first homebuyers this election, but the nature of the support is quite different.
The Coalition’s Home Guarantee
The Coalition is promising to expand its Home Guarantee Scheme[1], also known as its First Home Loan Deposit Scheme[2]. It’ll lift the number of places on offer from 10,000 to 35,000 per year, and reserve another 5,000 places for single parents.
As well, it will boost the highest purchase price the scheme can be used for. In Sydney it will climb from A$800,000 to $900,000; and in Melbourne from $700,000 to $800,000.
The scheme enables buyers with deposits as small as 5% (2% for single parents) to avoid paying the mortgage insurance that is normally required for deposits of less than 20%. The Commonwealth “guarantees[3]” the other 15% to 18%.
Mortgage insurance can cost as much as $30,000[4] on a $600,000 mortgage.
The guarantee is not a cash payment or a deposit.
Labor’s Help to Buy
Labor’s scheme, announced on Sunday is called Help to Buy[5] and owes something to work done by the Liberal Party’s Menzies Research Centre[6] in 2003 for then Prime Minister John Howard.
Labor’s scheme will offer 10,000 homebuyers the opportunity to share ownership with the Commonwealth which will put in up to 40% of the purchase price for a new home, and up to 30% for an existing home.
Read more: Older women often rent in poverty – shared home equity could help[7]
As with the Coalition’s Home Guarantee Scheme, eligible homebuyers will avoid the need for lenders mortgage insurance. Under Help to Buy, eligible homebuyers would pay a 2% rather than a 5% deposit.
Labor’s scheme is targeted at lower middle earners on taxable incomes of up to $90,000 for singles and $120,000 for couples, whereas the Coalition’s is available for singles on incomes up to $125,000 and couples up to $200,000.
Shared ownership isn’t new
The United Kingdom[8] has offered such a scheme for decades, as do state governments in Western Australia (Keystart[9]), South Australia (HomeStart[10]) and Victoria (Homebuyer[11]).
The report commissioned by Howard in 2004[12] found shared ownership “as critical to the welfare of Australian families today as was the emergence of the mortgage market at the turn of the last century”.
A report produced by the Grattan Institute[13] in 2022 found that while it might cost the government money in the short-term, it might save it money on rent assistance longer term if it got more Australians into home ownership.
Despite many attractive features, shared ownership has remained niche worldwide due to its complexities. In the UK, fewer than 1%[14] of households use it.
But shared ownership is complicated
In Labor’s scheme, the Commonwealth wouldn’t charge the owner rent on the portion of the home that it owned, while the owner would be responsible for ongoing costs such as rates and other bills. When the home is eventually sold the Commonwealth will get its money back plus its share of the capital gain.
As in the United Kingdom, at any time the owner can “staircase[15]”, buying more of their property from the Commonwealth, although if prices have risen since the initial purchase, the cost of buying further shares will have also risen.
Read more: Solutions beyond supply to the housing affordability problem[16]
If the homebuyer’s income exceeds the Help to Buy threshold for two consecutive years, they will be required to repay the government’s financial contribution in part or whole as their circumstances permit.
In other such schemes, owners face restrictions on their freedom to renovate and sub-let their properties. They can also pay more for their mortgages, as not all lenders offer their most competitive loans for such schemes.