How Parents Can Help Children to Buy Their 1st Home

How Parents Can Help Children to Buy Their 1st Home

Housing affordability is the current topic of conversation at dinner tables across Australia.

And for families with Gen Y children, in particular, it’s probably a discussion based around how they’ll struggle to ever buy their own home.

There’s no denying it has become a lot harder to get a start on the property ladder – and the main hurdle is saving the necessary deposit.

But parents have been helping their children buy properties for generations and many are keen to keep doing so.

So what options are out there to help your children into their first property?

Guarantor loans

One of the most common ways that parents help their children is by agreeing to a guarantor loan. 

A guarantor loan is a loan product that offers up some of their equity to their child or children to assist with the deposit.

For example, perhaps your daughter could only save $30,000 but needs $60,000 to qualify for a home loan.

As a parent, you could offer the additional $30,000 as cash or by the equity in your own property to make up the difference, which can make a big difference to Lenders’ Mortgage Insurance, especially.

It’s important to recognise, however, that while you may not have ownership rights over the property, you may be wholly and severally responsible for the entire loan if your daughter or son defaults.

That’s why if you’re considering this option, you should access expert advice before proceeding which could limit your exposure.

A financial gift

As a parent, we all want our children to have good lives and to be successful if that’s what they desire to do.

But does that mindset extend to giving them a financial gift to buy a property?

Money Gift

In my opinion, it really is a personal decision and will depend on factors such as your child’s capability to manage a home loan.

If your son or daughter has been spending every cent that they’ve earned for years, which is why they haven’t saved a property deposit, is it a good idea to just give them a handout?

Will they have the necessary financial discipline and know-how to not default on their mortgage repayments?

Perhaps a better idea could be to suggest a financial gift that matches their savings.

Housing affordability is the current topic of conversation at dinner tables across Australia. And for families with Gen Y children, in particular, it’s probably a discussion based around how they’ll struggle to ever buy their own home. There’s no denying it has become a lot harder to get a start on the property ladder –…

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