Home loans Australia: Why borrowers now have to chop up their credit cards

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Australians who want to get a home loan are now being told they will have to cut up all their credit cards. 

A series of Reserve Bank interest rate rises since May – the steepest in almost three decades – are reducing the lending capacity of banks.

With more interest rate rises expected, borrowers are set to have a harder time getting home loan approval.

The banks have, since November, been required to assess a borrower’s ability to cope with a three percentage point increase in variable mortgage rates.

Laws also came into effect in January 2019 that require a consumer to prove they would be able to completely pay off their credit card debt within three years, rather than just make minimum monthly repayments.

Australians who want to get a home loan are now being told they will have to completely cut up all their credit cards. New laws also came into effect in January 2019 requiring a consumer to prove they would be able to completely pay off their credit card debt within three years rather than just make minimum monthly repayments (pictured is a stock image)

Australians who want to get a home loan are now being told they will have to completely cut up all their credit cards. New laws also came into effect in January 2019 requiring a consumer to prove they would be able to completely pay off their credit card debt within three years rather than just make minimum monthly repayments (pictured is a stock image)

For borrowers, this means a home loan that would have easily been approved just three months ago, would now only be possible if a prospective home borrower shut down all their credit card accounts.

What someone earning $100,000 a year would be allowed to borrow

NO CREDIT CARD: $638,400

$1,000 CREDIT CARD LIMIT: $636,400

$2,000 CREDIT CARD LIMIT: $630,600

$5,000 CREDIT CARD LIMIT: $613,000

$6,000 CREDIT CARD LIMIT: $607,200 

$7,500 CREDIT CARD LIMIT: $598,500

$10,000 CREDIT CARD LIMIT: $583,800

Source: RateCity 

A RateCity analysis showed that a single borrower, earning $100,000 a year, would be able to borrow a maximum of $638,400 if they had no credit cards.

Someone on that kind of six-figure salary would be earning more than the average, full-time salary of $90,917 and borrowing slightly more than the average new home loan of $609,789. 

But if this borrower on a six-figure salary wanted to have a credit card – to be able to have an Apple iTunes account, buy goods online or book holiday accommodation – they would have to reduce the amount they borrowed.

An Australian earning $100,000 a year wanting to have a credit card could borrow $636,400 – but would have a strict $1,000 limit on their card.

This same borrower wanting a $5,000 credit card limit would only be able to take out a $613,000 mortgage.

To be allowed a credit card with a $10,000 limit, the borrowing capacity would be reduced to $583,800. But to have five-figure credit card limit, this individual’s borrowing capacity is reduced by $54,600.

RateCity research director Sally Tindall said cancelling a credit card now meant the difference between getting approval or being rejected for a home loan.

‘People looking to get the green light on their home loan application often cancel their credit card to boost their chance of approval, particularly if they’re carrying around more than one card,’ she told Daily Mail Australia.

‘So often, a credit card can be the difference between getting the green light on a new mortgage and having your application denied.

RateCity research director Sally Tindall said cancelling a credit card now meant the difference between getting approval or being rejected for a home loan

RateCity research director Sally Tindall said cancelling a credit card now meant the difference between getting approval or being rejected for a home loan

RateCity research director Sally Tindall said cancelling a credit card now meant the difference between getting approval or being rejected for a home loan

‘If you’re looking for a home loan, understand how much your credit card could impact your borrowing capacity and make an informed decision about your options. 

‘You might decide a credit card is a luxury you can do without in the short term in order to get green light from your bank for the home you want.’

While the big banks are expecting house prices to fall in 2022 and 2023, stricter credit card rules are set to make life harder for prospective borrowers who had already bought land with the intention of getting a construction loan to build a house.

The Cordell Construction Index showed residential building costs in the year to June had surged by 10 per cent, with a timber shortage driving up prices.

The double-digit increase in home building costs is even more severe than the 6.1 per cent inflation rate, itself the highest since 1990 without the one-off effect of the GST introduction in 2000 and 2001.

‘People looking to build are also having to counter the soaring cost of construction at a time when mortgage repayments are also on the rise,’ Ms Tindall said.

A RateCity analysis showed that a single borrower, earning $100,000 a year, would be able to borrow a maximum of $638,400 if they had no credit cards. But if this borrower on a six-figure salary wanted to have a credit card - to be able to have an Apple iTunes account, buy goods online or book holiday accommodation - they would have to reduce the amount they borrowed (pictured is a Melbourne auction)

A RateCity analysis showed that a single borrower, earning $100,000 a year, would be able to borrow a maximum of $638,400 if they had no credit cards. But if this borrower on a six-figure salary wanted to have a credit card - to be able to have an Apple iTunes account, buy goods online or book holiday accommodation - they would have to reduce the amount they borrowed (pictured is a Melbourne auction)

A RateCity analysis showed that a single borrower, earning $100,000 a year, would be able to borrow a maximum of $638,400 if they had no credit cards. But if this borrower on a six-figure salary wanted to have a credit card – to be able to have an Apple iTunes account, buy goods online or book holiday accommodation – they would have to reduce the amount they borrowed (pictured is a Melbourne auction)

Stricter credit card rules

$5,000 LIMIT: Minimum monthly repayment of $178

$10,000 LIMIT: Minimum monthly repayment of $357

$15,000 LIMIT: Minimum monthly repayment of $535

$20,000 LIMIT: Minimum monthly repayment of $713

The Commonwealth Bank, Australia’s biggest home lender allows individuals to take out construction loans on a property they co-own with a family member or a friend, something that not all banks allow.

But it is particularly strict in applying credit card rules to new borrowers.

‘There are many different factors that can impact a person’s borrowing capacity, including their income, expenses, savings, liabilities and credit history,’ a CBA spokeswoman told Daily Mail Australia.

‘No two borrowers are the same, and everyone has a different financial situation and needs that may change over time.’

National Australia Bank, however, doesn’t impose a zero dollar limit on credit cards for new home loan borrowers.

Under stricter new credit card rules that became into effect in 2019, a consumer with a $5,000 credit card has to make minimum monthly repayments of $178. 

To have a $10,000 limit, a minimum monthly repayment of $357 is required.

Someone with a $15,000 credit card limit needs to make minimum monthly repayments of $535.

A $20,000 credit card requires $713 minimum repayments.

Borrowers in May, June, July and August have copped 1.75 percentage points worth of rate increases, the steepest since 1994. 

ANZ is expecting the Reserve Bank cash rate to rise from a six-year of 1.85 per cent to a 10-year high of 3.35 per cent by November, with 0.5 percentage point increases in September, October and on Melbourne Cup day.

A borrower with a $600,000 mortgage would owe their bank $1,060 more every month in repayments compared with May when the RBA cash rate was still at a record low of 0.1 per cent. 

What borrowers could be paying by November every month compared with May

$500,000: Up $883 from $1,922 to $2,805

$600,000: Up $1,060 from $2,306 to $3,366

$700,000: Up $1,236 from $2,691 to $3,927

$800,000: Up $1,413 from $3,075 to $4,488

$900,000: Up $1,590 from $3,459 to $5,049

$1,000,000: Up $1,767 from $3,843 to $5,610

Calculations based on the cash rate rising from a record-low of 0.1 per cent in May to 3.35 per cent by November, as predicted by ANZ. Monthly repayments based on a popular variable Commonwealth Bank rate increase from 2.29 per cent to a projected 5.39 per cent