AgentFinance
Last updated date Updated March 2026

Home Loan Borrowing Power · Australia · 2026

How much can I borrow on a $130,000 salary in Australia 2026?

A $130,000 annual income is typical for a executive, senior consultant, or director. Here's exactly how much you can borrow for a home loan in Australia in 2026 — with a full breakdown of your mortgage serviceability, HEM living expenses, APRA buffer, deposit requirements, and how your $130k salary compares across 8 major lenders.

Estimated home loan borrowing power — $130,000 salary · Australia 2026
$630,000
Typical lender range: $540,000 – $720,000  ·  Assumes average HEM expenses, no existing debt, $80,000 deposit
Calculated using 6.14% variable rate + APRA 3% serviceability buffer, 30-year term
$3,834/mo
Est. monthly mortgage repayment at 6.14%, 30-year home loan
$160,000
Deposit needed to avoid LMI (20% of property value)
$750,240
Total interest payable over 30 years at current rates

Income & serviceability calculation for $130,000

Australian banks and mortgage lenders calculate your maximum home loan by working out your Uncommitted Monthly Income (UMI) — the money left over after tax and living expenses that's available to service a mortgage. Here's exactly how lenders calculate that figure on a $130,000 gross salary:

How Australian lenders calculate borrowing power on $130,000 gross salary · March 2026
Calculation stepMonthly amountNotes
Gross monthly income$10,833$130,000/yr before tax
Income tax (PAYG)−$2,7262025–26 ATO tax rates, no offsets applied
Net monthly take-home$8,107After-tax income available
HEM living expenses−$2,968Household Expenditure Measure benchmark for $130,000 income
Uncommitted Monthly Income (UMI)$5,139Available to service a mortgage
APRA assessment rate9.14% (6.14% variable + mandatory 3% buffer)
Maximum home loan (30yr)$630,000  —  monthly repayment $3,834
Important: If your actual monthly expenses exceed the HEM benchmark of $2,968, lenders use your declared figure. Understating expenses is mortgage fraud — always declare your real spending. Higher expenses directly reduce UMI and therefore your mortgage borrowing capacity.

Why your $130k salary gives you $630,000 in borrowing power

The APRA 3% serviceability buffer is the single biggest constraint. Without it, on a $130,000 income you'd theoretically borrow $820,000+ — but the buffer ensures lenders only approve what you can comfortably repay if the home loan interest rate rises to 9.14%. This protects both borrowers and Australia's financial system from overleveraging.

The HEM benchmark for your income level is $2,968/month. This covers basic food, clothing, transport, utilities, and essential household costs. It does not include private school fees, overseas travel, dining out, or subscription services — if your genuine expenses are higher, lenders use that figure instead, which reduces your maximum mortgage accordingly.

What affects your home loan borrowing capacity

Your $130,000 salary is the starting point, but these four variables have the biggest impact on whether you land at $540,000 or $720,000 when applying for a home loan in Australia:

APRA 3% Serviceability Buffer
Lenders must assess your ability to repay your home loan at the actual rate + 3%. At 6.14%, they test at 9.14%. This single regulation reduces your mortgage borrowing power by approximately 20–25% compared to face-value calculations. It's the biggest constraint on $130k salary borrowers — and applies to every Australian lender.
HEM Living Expenses Benchmark
On $130,000, lenders use a HEM benchmark of approximately $2,968/month. Every extra $500/month in genuine living expenses reduces your home loan borrowing capacity by roughly $60,000. Moving to a cheaper suburb or cutting discretionary spending before applying can meaningfully improve your mortgage outcome.
HECS-HELP Student Debt
On a $130,000 salary, your mandatory HECS repayment rate is 6% of gross income — approximately $704/month. This reduces your net monthly income before any mortgage serviceability calculation. A $40,000 HECS balance can reduce your home loan borrowing power by around $90,000. Paying down HECS is one of the best pre-mortgage strategies for high-income buyers.
Credit Cards & Existing Debts
Lenders assess 3–3.8% of your total credit limit each month — regardless of your balance. A $15,000 credit card reduces your borrowing capacity by approximately $70,000. Car loans and personal loans are deducted in full. Reducing limits 3–6 months before applying for a home loan is a proven way to improve your approved amount.

Borrowing power by lender — $130,000 salary compared

Not all Australian lenders apply the same HEM tables or mortgage credit policies. On a $130,000 income, the gap between the most and least generous lender can exceed $115,000. Here's how 8 major lenders compare for high-income buyers:

Estimated maximum home loan borrowing power on $130,000 gross income — 8 Australian lenders, March 2026. Rates and estimates are indicative only.
LenderEst. Max Home LoanVariable RateKey notes
CBA$565,0005.99%–6.44%Conservative HEM, offset accounts
ANZ$575,0006.04%–6.49%Flexible redraw, strong app
Westpac$560,0006.09%–6.54%First Home Buyer packages
NAB$580,0005.99%–6.39%No-fee options, good LMI waiver
Macquarie$655,0005.89%–6.24%Higher HEM tolerance, online-first
ING$660,0005.84%–6.19%Lowest Big bank rates, offset
Reduce HL$680,0005.69%–5.99%Best rates, non-bank flexibility
Pepper Money$660,0006.14%–7.50%Non-standard income, self-employed
Estimates assume average HEM, no existing debts, standard PAYG employment on $130,000. Self-employed borrowers, those with HECS debt, or borrowers with dependants may see different figures. Chat with Finley for a personalised comparison across 22 lenders in 60 seconds.

Repayment scenarios & rate stress test

On a $630,000 home loan at today's 6.14% variable rate, your estimated monthly mortgage repayment is $3,834. Here's how that changes with interest rate movements — and what extra repayments could save you over the life of the loan:

$3,633/mo
Rate drops to 5.64% (−0.5%)
$3,834/mo
Current variable rate 6.14%
$4,251/mo
Rate rises to 7.14% (+1.0%)

Extra repayments: paying $500/month extra

Making extra repayments of $500/month on your $630,000 home loan could save approximately $223,900 in interest and pay off your mortgage 7.8 years earlier. Most Australian variable rate home loans allow unlimited extra repayments without penalty — an offset account is another effective strategy, reducing interest daily without locking away funds.

LVR and Lenders Mortgage Insurance (LMI)

Your Loan-to-Value Ratio (LVR) is the proportion of the property's value covered by the loan. With a $630,000 mortgage and $80,000 deposit, your LVR is approximately 88.7%. An LVR above 80% triggers Lenders Mortgage Insurance (LMI) — a one-off premium protecting the lender, not you. To avoid LMI on a $630,000 loan, you need a deposit of at least $160,000.

Stamp duty on a $710,000 property

Buying a property worth approximately $710,000 — the estimated purchase price with a $630,000 mortgage and $80,000 deposit — will attract stamp duty costs that vary significantly by state. Victorian buyers pay around $39,000, while Queensland buyers pay around $32,000. First home buyers in most states receive concessions or full exemptions on stamp duty up to certain thresholds.

How to increase your home loan borrowing power on $130,000

If your borrowing estimate of $630,000 isn't enough for your target property, here are the most effective strategies for high-income buyers earning $130k to increase their mortgage borrowing capacity before applying:

1. Reduce or close credit card limits

This is the fastest win. Request a credit limit reduction (or full closure) on cards you rarely use. Lenders treat 3.8% of your total limits as a monthly obligation — a $20,000 reduction in credit limits adds approximately $95,000 to your home loan borrowing power. Allow 30–60 days for the credit bureau to update before applying.

2. Pay down HECS-HELP debt

On $130,000, your HECS repayment rate is 6% of gross income. Voluntarily paying down HECS before applying reduces your assessed monthly commitments directly. Unlike the old bonus for voluntary repayments, there's no discount now — but the UMI benefit is real and can unlock tens of thousands in additional mortgage capacity.

3. Apply with a co-borrower

A joint home loan application combines both incomes and can push borrowing capacity well beyond $720,000. Even a second income of $40,000–$50,000/year adds approximately $30,000–$80,000 to the combined borrowing power, subject to shared debts and living expenses.

4. Choose a more generous lender

Non-bank lenders like Macquarie, ING, and Reduce Home Loans apply less conservative HEM tables than the Big 4. The difference on a $130,000 salary can be $95,000+ in additional borrowing capacity. A mortgage broker can access policies across 30+ lenders to find the best fit for your income profile — without impacting your credit score.

5. Use an offset account from day one

An offset account linked to your home loan reduces the interest calculated daily. On a $630,000 mortgage, keeping $20,000–$30,000 in an offset saves approximately $1,000 in interest per year. Over 30 years, this compounds significantly — and unlike extra repayments, the funds remain accessible.

6. Pre-approval: lock in your borrowing capacity

Getting a mortgage pre-approval before property hunting locks in your assessed borrowing capacity with a specific lender for 3–6 months. This gives you confidence at auction, protects against rate changes during your search, and signals to vendors you're a serious buyer. Chat with Finley for a digital pre-qualification across 22 lenders in minutes — no credit check required.

Frequently asked questions

On a gross annual salary of $130,000, most Australian lenders will allow you to borrow approximately $540,000 to $720,000, with $630,000 being the midpoint estimate. This calculation uses the HEM (Household Expenditure Measure) benchmark for living expenses and the APRA-mandated 3% serviceability buffer on top of the variable home loan rate. Your actual mortgage borrowing capacity varies based on your declared living expenses, existing debts, deposit size, HECS-HELP balance, and the specific lender's credit policy.
To borrow $630,000 without Lenders Mortgage Insurance (LMI), you need a 20% deposit of approximately $160,000. The total property value would be around $710,000. First home buyers may qualify for the First Home Guarantee (FHBG) with as little as 5% deposit with no LMI. The Family Home Guarantee allows eligible single parents to buy with just 2% deposit.
APRA (Australian Prudential Regulation Authority) requires all lenders to assess your capacity to repay at the actual loan rate plus an additional 3%. With current variable rates around 6.14%, lenders stress-test at 9.14%. On a $130,000 income, this buffer alone reduces your maximum home loan by approximately $140,000 compared to face-value calculations — it's designed to ensure you can still afford repayments if interest rates rise significantly.
Yes, significantly. HECS-HELP repayments are treated as a monthly liability by all Australian lenders. On a $130,000 salary, your mandatory repayment rate is approximately 6% of gross income — around $704 per month. This reduces your Uncommitted Monthly Income (UMI) and can reduce your home loan borrowing capacity by approximately $90,000. Paying down HECS before applying for a mortgage is one of the highest-ROI preparation steps available.
Non-bank lenders typically offer higher borrowing capacity than the Big 4 banks on a $130,000 salary, sometimes by $90,000 or more. Macquarie, ING, and Reduce Home Loans consistently allow higher loan amounts due to more generous HEM assumptions. A mortgage broker can compare policies across 20+ lenders to find the highest borrowing power for your situation. Chat with Finley to get a live comparison.
Yes. The most effective strategies for high-income buyers on $130,000 are: (1) reduce or close credit card limits — every $10,000 reduction adds approximately $47,000 to borrowing capacity; (2) pay down HECS; (3) apply jointly with a partner; (4) choose a more generous non-bank lender; (5) reduce declared living expenses by genuinely cutting costs (not under-declaring).

Compare other salary levels

See how home loan borrowing power changes across different Australian income levels.