Today, the Australian banking regulator APRA announced a recommendation for Australian banks to increase their home loan serviceability buffer from 2.50% to 3.00% in a bid to reduce the amount of money Australian’s can borrow for a home loan.
Currently, we’re seeing record low home loan rates, and although you might get offered an interest rate of 1.79%, the bank is likely still assessing you at 4.95% or more.
The current requirement is that banks must add a buffer of 2.50% to your actual home loan rate to see if you can meet the home loan repayments if interest rates were to increase, and they can’t assess you at a rate any lower than their ‘floor rate’. NAB currently has a floor rate of 4.95% meaning that any interest rate they offer you below 2.45% would still be assessed at the floor rate of 4.95%.
In some circumstances, if the interest rate the bank offers you is below 2.00%, then increasing the servicing rate buffer to 3.00% may not make much difference to your borrowing capacity because some banks have floor rates of 5.25%, ING currently has one of the highest floor rates of 6.10%.
APRA has estimated that this change should reduce overall borrowing capacity by approximately 5%. If you can currently borrow a home loan of up to $600,000 then this may drop to $570,000 after October 31st.
For further clarification, please speak with your Baylend mortgage broker for a detailed explanation and obligation-free quote on your borrowing capacity.