
Mixed reviews over 'nation-leading' home buyer scheme
A "nation-leading" home ownership scheme has been defended by a state government amid concerns it will lead to more mortgage stress.
Treasurer David Janetzki highlighted the "boost to buy" plan when he handed down the first Queensland budget under a Liberal National government since 2014.
It featured $8.1 billion in housing funding that included what was described as the country's most generous shared equity scheme.
Mr Janetzki promised 30 per cent equity in new builds and 25 per cent in existing homes of up to $1 million for 1000 Queenslanders.
The scheme will cost $165 million over the next two years and applies to singles earning up to $150,000 and couples up to $225,000.
Mr Janetzki said the move came after concerns a generation of young people were giving up on the dream of home ownership.
"We're trying to send a message of supply and of hope for younger generations," he said.
However the treasurer was forced to defend the scheme amid fears participants may still experience significant mortgage stress.
Brisbane's median house price officially surpassed the $1 million mark in January.
"We make no apologies for being so aspirational for aspirational Queenslanders," Mr Janetzki said.
"My view is, a thousand people, that's what we need to drive this program. I don't accept that it won't get more people into homes."
The Real Estate Institute of Queensland welcomed the scheme, calling it a "smart, timely step to match market conditions".
The Queensland Council of Social Services said measures that improved home ownership were positive but believed the scheme could be targeted better.
"What we would like to see is that it would be targeted to people who are the least likely to be able to do it without government support," QCOSS chief executive Aimee McVeigh told AAP.
"It could be a really significant change for those families and generate intergenerational wealth, which is really important when you think about how we lift people out of poverty or provide people with financial security into the future."
Labor's Shannon Fentiman expressed support for the shared-equity scheme but believed it would only assist a small number of Queenslanders.
The LNP government's budget forecasts an $8.6 billion deficit in 2025/26 before dipping to a $1 billion deficit in 2028/29.
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Will the LNP's new scheme help me become a first-home buyer?
For the first time, I've found myself in a position to consider homeownership. 'Consider' is still very much the operative word, but it's a step up from 'I'll never break out of the rental market, here's to a life of permanent frivolity'. Buying my first home (which will probably be a small unit if I want to be close to the city) became less of a foreign concept after the Crisafulli government announced a new shared equity scheme as part of this week's state budget. A shared equity scheme essentially allows the government to chip in and help you buy a home, with the equity they own either paid back over the time you live in it, or when you sell. Under Queensland's Boost to Buy program, the government will contribute up to 30 per cent equity for a new build, or 25 per cent for an existing home, for properties worth up to $1 million, with a minimum 2 per cent deposit. Singles earning up to $150,000, or two adults with a combined income of $225,000, would be eligible to apply. This is really aimed at helping those of us who don't have the bank of mum, dad or benevolent benefactor to chip in for a house deposit, or a realistic way to save $100,000 in a meaningful timeframe, which is basically what I'd need to afford a deposit now in Brisbane. Loading 'Queenslanders shouldn't be locked out of buying a home because they don't have the bank of mum and dad,' Premier David Crisafulli said on Tuesday. The government has also extended the $30,000 grant for first homes and land under $750,000 until June 2026, and abolished stamp duty for first home buyers purchasing a new build. While I meet the criteria for the Boost to Buy program, I'm not getting too excited that this alone will change my housing prospects. The scheme is only available for 1000 applicants, and even with the deposit sorted, there could still be a significant mortgage to manage.


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