FIND YOUR LOCAL BUYERS' ADVOCATE:
    TALKS & PODCAST           CALL US CALL US
1300 655 615
 
 

The
Propertybuyer

Podcast

Hear the latest weekly insights into the property market via podcast by Rich Harvey, CEO and founder of Propertybuyer.

 
Fri 29 Mar '24 with Rich Harvey How to build a $7 Million Property Portfolio from scratch
 
 
Sat 16 Mar '24 with Rich Harvey Why Invest in Melbourne?
 
 
Mon 26 Feb '24 with Rich Harvey Sydney’s Inner West – Hotspots and Outlook for 2024
 
 
Mon 12 Feb '24 with Rich Harvey Decoding Sydney’s North Shore Market – Outlook and Opportunities.
 
 
Sat 27 Jan '24 with Rich Harvey Home Buying in the Eastern Suburbs – A personal journey
 
 
Sun 7 Jan '24 with Rich Harvey Economic and Property Market Outlook 2024
 

 

Listen to many more
podcasts on our
Podcasts page.

 
 
 

Propertybuyer Blog
Property advice, market updates & more

 

Did the Census just tell you if you should buy Sydney property?

July 17, 2017 / Written by Rich Harvey

 

By Rich Harvey, CEO, propertybuyer.com.au

A deposit on a property today could have paid for two Sydney properties 30 years ago. Macquarie University research shows that in 1986, Sydney's median price was just over $98,000. It's mind-boggling to think that doesn't make half of a deposit on a median-priced Sydney property today.

Over the long-term, the profits of buying real estate are immense. But looking at the recently released Census statistics, many people are opting out at a time when I believe they shouldn't.

The history (and future) of home ownership in Australia

Historic Census data shows how the home ownership landscape has changed.

In 1947, 53.4 per cent of Australians owned their home outright (including just 8 per cent paying off a mortgage), and 44 per cent rented. The proportion of people who owned a property increased to 70.3 per cent in 1961, and remained fairly stable around the 68 per cent mark all the way through to 2006.

Home ownership is on the decline - but should it be this way?
Home ownership is on the decline - but should it be this way?

But in the last ten years, the data has slowly but surely started to skew in terms of outright home ownership. The 2016 Census shows that full ownership is down to 31 per cent, ownership with a mortgage is down to 34.5 per cent, and renting has increased to 30.9 per cent.

Small margins, sure, but the trend is clear. Home ownership is on the decline - and I think people need to understand the gravity of that.

The perfect time to buy is a myth

Prices in Sydney are out of reach for many consumers - I can't argue that. But looking at those massive price gains over a 30-year period, I think it's worth weighing up the pros of owning property with a mortgage versus the cons of renting - namely, asset ownership.

Financial conditions are never going to be perfect.

Financial conditions are never going to be perfect. There is no such thing as an objective right time to buy. House hunters need to look at all options available to them while interest rates are near record lows - guarantors, low-deposit loans, buying off-the-plan, buying cheaper property on the fringes of Sydney, rentvesting - and take on board the long-term growth of real estate.

Without accounting for inflation, Sydney prices have gone up tenfold in 30 years - there's no reason they won't do so again. Aim for what you can, realise perfection in the housing market is a myth, and use a buyers' agent to secure an asset that sets you up for life.

The Propertybuyer
Podcast

 
Fri 29 Mar '24
with Rich Harvey
How to build a $7 Million Property Portfolio from scratch
 
 
Sat 16 Mar '24
with Rich Harvey
Why Invest in Melbourne?
 
 
Mon 26 Feb '24
with Rich Harvey
Sydney’s Inner West – Hotspots and Outlook for 2024
 
 
Mon 12 Feb '24
with Rich Harvey
Decoding Sydney’s North Shore Market – Outlook and Opportunities.
 
 
Sat 27 Jan '24
with Rich Harvey
Home Buying in the Eastern Suburbs – A personal journey
 
 
Sun 7 Jan '24
with Rich Harvey
Economic and Property Market Outlook 2024
 

 

Listen to many more
podcasts on our
Podcasts page.