- Jurisdiction
- Australia
- Review date
- 24 June 2026
- Document type
- Evidence report, not advice
- Source posture
- Current checked sources only
Abstract
This report reviews borrowing capacity and serviceability buffers: 2026 evidence report for Australian property investors as at 24 June 2026. It uses APRA macroprudential settings, APRA APG 223 mortgage-lending guidance, ASIC responsible-lending guidance, RBA cash-rate and lender-rate tables, ABS Lending Indicators, and Moneysmart home-loan guidance.
As at 24 June 2026, borrowing capacity should be treated as a moving credit constraint, not a fixed personal number. The evidence supports a report workflow that separates lender assessment rate, debt-to-income, verified income, living expenses, rental-income haircuts, tax assumptions, and material loan changes.
Borrowing capacity is not the amount a buyer wants. It is a lender assessment made from income, expenses, existing debt, property risk, credit policy, and current macroprudential settings.
Figures
RBA Cash Rate Target, checked 24 June 2026
April 2026
Minimum buffer in percentage points
Loan rate plus buffer
Illustrative only. Adds APRA 3 percentage point buffer to the RBA April 2026 new investor principal and interest rate.
Percentage points above loan rate
Debt-to-income multiple
Percent of new loans in each portfolio
Percent of risk-weighted assets
Selected APRA macroprudential settings. Units differ by bar and are stated in the helper text.
Illustrative gross rent index
APRA prudent policy reference
Before property expenses
Illustrative index using APRA guidance for a minimum 20% haircut on expected rental income.
Quarterly change: -6.2%
Quarterly change: -6.9%
Quarterly change: -5.3%
Quarterly change: -4.3%
Number of new loan commitments for dwellings in March Quarter 2026.
1. Scope and Method
This section explains the source base and the limits of the report.
This report is limited to Australian property, lending, tax, and retirement planning material checked on 24 June 2026. It states general decision rules only. It does not calculate a personal advice outcome.
Official and public sources are used for rule statements and current data. Reddit, forums, and search themes are used only to identify common questions. They are not used as proof of law, tax treatment, or market fact.
References: [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]
| Evidence type | Use in this report | Limit | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Official guidance | APRA macroprudential settings, APRA APG 223 mortgage-lending guidance, ASIC responsible-lending guidance, RBA cash-rate and lender-rate tables, ABS Lending Indicators, and Moneysmart home-loan guidance | Used for rule statements, definitions, and current settings. | [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13] |
| Market and statistical data | RBA, ABS, APRA, Services Australia, and state revenue pages are used where relevant. | Used as current context, not as a forecast. | [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13] |
| Forum and search themes | Used to find common investor questions and confusing terms. | Not used as factual authority. |
2. Evidence Snapshot
As at 24 June 2026, borrowing capacity should be treated as a moving credit constraint, not a fixed personal number. The evidence supports a report workflow that separates lender assessment rate, debt-to-income, verified income, living expenses, rental-income haircuts, tax assumptions, and material loan changes.
The evidence is read conservatively. A claim is included only when it can be linked to a checked source or is clearly labelled as an illustrative modelling step.
References: [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]
| Topic | Checked position | Model action | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Current macroprudential settings | APRA confirmed in June 2026 that the mortgage serviceability buffer remains 3 percentage points, the countercyclical capital buffer remains 1% of risk-weighted assets, and high-DTI limits remain unchanged. | Use the current serviceability buffer as a live setting. Do not rely on an older borrowing-power estimate. | [1] |
| High-DTI lending limit | APRA activated a debt-to-income lending limit effective from February 2026. ADIs may lend up to 20% of new owner-occupied and up to 20% of new investment loans at DTI of six times or more. | Show debt-to-income before assuming another purchase, equity release, refinance, or debt recycling step. | [2][1] |
| Serviceability purpose | APRA APG 223 states that serviceability tests assess a borrower's ability to service and repay a loan without undue hardship, including under economic stress. | Frame borrowing capacity as a stress-tested repayment question, not as a property-price target. | [3] |
| Assessment-rate buffer | APRA APG 223 states that ADIs must apply a buffer over a loan interest rate of at least 3.0%, unless APRA determines otherwise. | Model the lender assessment rate separately from the advertised rate and the current repayment rate. | [3][1] |
| Existing debts | APRA guidance says serviceability should consider existing and ongoing debt commitments, including secured and unsecured debt, interest rates, principal, redraw availability, and delinquency evidence. | Include credit cards, personal loans, HELP debt where relevant, other mortgages, redraw limits, and buy-now-pay-later style commitments in the debt file. | [3] |
| Interest-only assessment | APRA expects interest-only loans to be assessed on the borrower's ability to meet future principal and interest repayments over the actual repayment period after the interest-only period. | Use the post-reset repayment as the main serviceability case for interest-only debt. | [3][13] |
| Income verification | APRA guidance says prudent ADIs make reasonable inquiries and verify income using evidence such as employment status, payslips, employer or accountant confirmation, tax returns, bank statements, business activity statements, and credit history checks. | Prepare the evidence pack before relying on a calculator result or verbal borrowing estimate. | [3][5] |
| Variable income | APRA guidance states that prudent practice discounts or disregards temporarily high or uncertain income, including bonuses, overtime, commissions, investment income, rental income, and other non-salary income. | Run assessed income below actual income for bonuses, overtime, casual work, contractor income, self-employed income, and projected rent. | [3] |
| Self-employed borrowers | APRA guidance says self-employed borrowers are generally more difficult to assess because income tends to be less certain and needs stronger verification. | Use tax returns, accountant evidence, cash-flow records, bank statements, and business activity statements before relying on a borrowing-capacity estimate. | [3] |
| Rental-income haircut | APRA guidance says prudent serviceability policies incorporate a minimum 20% haircut on expected rental income, with larger haircuts appropriate where non-occupancy risk is higher. | Stress rent before expenses. Do not model gross advertised rent as fully available to service debt. | [3] |
| Tax-loss reliance | APRA guidance says good practice places no reliance on a borrower's potential future tax benefit from operating a rental property at a loss. If included, it should be assessed at the current interest rate rather than a buffered rate. | Keep negative-gearing effects outside the primary repayment-capacity test unless a lender confirms treatment. | [3] |
| Living expenses | APRA guidance says ADIs should use the greater of declared living expenses or an appropriately scaled HEM or HPI index where those indices are used, and should not rely solely on expense indices. | Build a declared-expense case and a benchmark-expense case. Use the harsher result for the cautious model. | [3] |
| Responsible lending | ASIC states that credit licensees must not enter, suggest, or assist with a credit contract if the contract is unsuitable, and must make inquiries, verify financial situation, and assess whether the contract is not unsuitable. | Treat lender approval as a documented suitability and verification process, not a sales estimate. | [5] |
| Rate context | The RBA cash-rate target entry for 17 June 2026 was 4.35%. The RBA April 2026 lender-rate table reported new investor principal and interest housing loans at 6.09%. | Use actual lender rates for decisions, and use RBA rates only as source-backed context. | [6][7] |
| Lending market context | ABS reported that the number of new investor loan commitments for dwellings fell 5.3% in March Quarter 2026, while the annual change was +18.8%. | Use the data as market context. Do not infer that every borrower can increase debt. | [8] |
| Borrowing calculator limit | Moneysmart says its mortgage calculator can help work out how much a person may be able to afford to borrow and what repayments might be, while home-loan guidance also stresses realistic affordability. | Use calculators for scenario testing. Treat lender assessment and written approval as separate evidence. | [9][11] |
| Consumer stress check | Moneysmart advises borrowers to calculate costs if interest rates went up by 2% and to compare loans from at least two lenders. | Add a consumer-facing +2% repayment case beside the lender-buffer case. | [10] |
3. Current Trends and Hot Topics
This section records issues that are current enough to change a buyer workflow, while avoiding forecasts.
A trend is included only when it changes a document check, cash buffer, timing assumption, or adviser question.
References: [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]
| Current issue | Observed position | Report action | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Serviceability buffer still matters | APRA kept the mortgage serviceability buffer at 3 percentage points in its June 2026 macroprudential update. | Keep serviceability-buffer language on the page. It is still a live borrowing-power topic. | [1] |
| High-DTI limit is now live | The APRA DTI limit started in February 2026 and remains unchanged in the June 2026 update. | Use high-DTI, DTI of six times, and borrowing capacity language, but tie each claim to APRA settings. | [2][1] |
| Investor leverage is under watch | APRA has linked the DTI limit to riskier high-DTI lending and applies the setting separately to owner-occupier and investor portfolios. | Create separate owner-occupier and investor debt-to-income rows in the model. | [2] |
| Rental-income haircut is a real constraint | APRA guidance refers to a minimum 20% haircut on expected rental income and larger haircuts where non-occupancy risk is higher. | Answer SEO questions about rental income and borrowing power with the haircut visible. | [3] |
| Living-expense benchmarks are not enough | APRA says reliance solely on HEM or HPI would generally not meet sound risk-management requirements. | Ask for actual spending evidence and compare it with benchmark-style expenses. | [3] |
| Self-employed borrowing needs more evidence | APRA guidance says self-employed income tends to be less certain and requires more verification. | Build a self-employed evidence checklist instead of promising a simple borrowing-power shortcut. | [3] |
| Pre-approval is not final approval | ASIC responsible-lending guidance and APRA serviceability guidance point to verification and assessment, not informal borrowing estimates. | Use finance clauses, valuation checks, and final-credit-approval wording in the workflow. | [5][3] |
| Material loan changes can reset the test | APRA says repayment-basis changes, interest-only extensions, fixed to floating changes, and tenor extensions can require a new serviceability assessment. | Treat refinance, loan split changes, term extensions, and interest-only changes as fresh credit events. | [3] |
| Comparison-site results need caution | Moneysmart says comparison websites can be useful but may make money through promoted links and may not cover all options. | Use comparison sites for discovery only. Ask lenders or brokers for written, personalised quotes. | [10] |
| Calculator SEO must stay honest | Moneysmart calculator language is scenario-based and ASIC responsible-lending guidance requires suitability assessment. | Use terms such as borrowing power, serviceability calculator, and how much can I borrow, but state that calculators are not approvals. | [11][5] |
| Non-bank fallback needs its own risk row | APRA said it will monitor spillovers toward non-ADI lenders after DTI limits. | Do not present non-bank finance as an automatic answer when ADI borrowing capacity fails. | [2] |
| Reddit and forum question discovery | Common themes include borrowing power shock, declined pre-approval, overtime income, rental income haircuts, HELP debt, credit cards, broker calculators, and pre-approval versus final approval. These are prompts only. | Use forums to find questions. Use official sources for the answer. |
4. Stress Tests
A useful report shows what can go wrong before it recommends a next step.
The stress tests below are deliberately simple. They are designed to stop a single attractive number, such as a low rate, tax deduction, or high rent estimate, from carrying the whole decision.
| Stress test | Question answered | Conservative action | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Assessment-rate case | What is the repayment if the current loan rate is assessed with a 3 percentage point buffer? | Show actual repayment, lender-buffer repayment, and Moneysmart +2% repayment in separate columns. | [3][10] |
| High-DTI case | Does the borrower sit at DTI of six times or more? | Show total debt, verified income, DTI, and whether the loan sits inside the high-DTI category. | [2] |
| Income haircut | What happens if bonus, overtime, commission, contractor income, investment income, or rental income is discounted? | Run actual income and assessed income as separate rows. | [3] |
| Self-employed evidence gap | Can the borrower verify income with tax returns, bank statements, business records, accountant evidence, and credit checks? | Do not rely on gross turnover, recent strong months, or unaudited management accounts alone. | [3] |
| Rental-income haircut | Can the purchase still service if expected rent is reduced by at least 20% before property expenses? | Use haircut rent, vacancy allowance, property expenses, and lender-specific treatment. | [3] |
| Living-expense uplift | Does the deal still work if lender expenses are higher than the household estimate? | Use declared expenses and benchmark-style expenses, then carry the higher result. | [3] |
| Existing debt stack | Do all secured and unsecured debts still service after buffers, including credit-card limits and revolving debt? | Include unused credit-card limits, redraw, personal loans, HELP debt where relevant, and other mortgages. | [3] |
| Interest-only reset | Can the borrower meet principal and interest repayments over the remaining term after the interest-only period? | Use the post-interest-only repayment for the primary borrowing-capacity scenario. | [3][13] |
| No tax-benefit support | Can the loan service if future negative-gearing benefits are ignored? | Make the pre-tax cash-flow case pass before adding a tax-effect sensitivity. | [3] |
| Loan-term extension | Would a longer term reduce monthly repayments but increase total interest and still require fresh serviceability review? | Compare term, monthly repayment, total interest, and credit-assessment trigger. | [10][3] |
| Fixed-to-variable change | Would a fixed-rate expiry or switch to variable change the repayment and require assessment? | Track fixed expiry dates and show new-rate and buffer-rate cases. | [3][6] |
| Valuation and security shock | Can the lending still proceed if valuation is lower or the security property is outside lender risk appetite? | Keep valuation, LVR, lender mortgage insurance, postcode concentration, and finance-clause risk visible. | [3] |
| No-refinance case | Can the household continue if refinance is declined, delayed, or uneconomic? | Carry a fallback case with existing lender, existing rate, and no equity release. | [12][3] |
| Hardship and arrears trigger | At what cash-flow shortfall would the borrower contact the lender before arrears appear? | Set the contact trigger before a missed repayment, not after the model has failed. | [9] |
5. Portfolio Workflow
The workflow keeps tax, debt, cash flow, and exit risk in the same file.
The same workflow should be repeated before acquisition, refinance, renovation, sale, or retirement planning. This keeps the report predictable across the full portfolio.
| Step | Do this | Evidence to keep | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Borrowing-capacity register | Record each lender estimate, broker model, calculator result, date, assumed rate, buffer, debt, income, expenses, LVR, and expiry. | Do not compare borrowing-power numbers unless the assumptions are stored beside them. | |
| Income evidence pack | Prepare payslips, employment contract, tax returns, bank statements, accountant letter, business activity statements, lease evidence, and income notes. | Tag each income line as salary, variable income, self-employed income, rental income, or other income. | [3][5] |
| Assessed-income sheet | Show actual income, verified income, haircut income, and lender-accepted income. | Keep a plain note explaining every excluded, discounted, or uncertain income line. | [3] |
| Expense and debt sheet | List declared living expenses, benchmark-style expenses, credit cards, personal loans, HELP debt where relevant, other mortgages, redraw, and arrears history. | Use the harsher of declared or benchmark-style expenses in the conservative case. | [3] |
| Rental-income sheet | List actual rent, expected rent, vacancy risk, APRA-style haircut, property expenses, and net rent used for serviceability. | Use actual rent where available and disclose when the model relies on estimates. | [3] |
| Rate and buffer table | Show current rate, lender assessment rate, RBA reference rate, Moneysmart +2% case, and monthly repayment. | Keep lender-specific calculations separate from public-source context. | [6][7][10] |
| DTI tracker | Calculate debt-to-income before and after each proposed purchase, refinance, split, equity release, or debt recycling step. | Flag DTI of six times or more and keep owner-occupied and investment debt separate. | [2] |
| Material-change checklist | Flag interest-only extension, repayment-basis change, fixed to variable change, tenor extension, equity release, and refinance. | Treat each material change as a fresh serviceability question. | [3] |
| Pre-approval discipline | Distinguish calculator result, broker estimate, conditional pre-approval, valuation, final approval, and unconditional loan offer. | Keep finance clauses and settlement timing in the acquisition file. | [5][11] |
| Loan comparison file | Compare at least two lender quotes, noting interest rate, comparison rate, fees, repayment, loan term, features, and conditions. | Use comparison websites for discovery only, then request written personalised quotes. | [10] |
| Adviser questions | Ask the broker or lender which income was shaded, which debts were buffered, how rent was assessed, and whether tax benefits were counted. | Add the answers to the claim map so weak assumptions stay visible. | [3] |
| Decision gate | Proceed only when base case, buffer case, high-DTI case, rental-haircut case, and no-refinance case are documented. | If the model only works under one optimistic lender estimate, pause and gather stronger evidence. |
6. Limits and Claim Map
The report supports analysis, not personal financial, tax, legal, or credit advice.
The safest reading is cautious. Use this report to structure questions, identify missing evidence, and prepare adviser conversations. Do not treat it as an approval, forecast, valuation, or tax ruling.
References: [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13]
| Claim | Evidence used | Status | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Borrowing capacity is lender-assessed and time-specific. | APRA and ASIC guidance require assessment, verification, and risk controls, while APRA settings can change. | Supported. Do not present borrowing capacity as a fixed entitlement. | [3][1][5] |
| The 3 percentage point serviceability buffer remains current. | APRA June 2026 macroprudential settings and APG 223 both support the 3.0% buffer statement. | Supported as a current policy setting checked on 24 June 2026. | [1][3] |
| High-DTI lending is a practical investor constraint in 2026. | APRA activated the DTI limit in February 2026 and left the high-DTI limits unchanged in June 2026. | Supported for credit workflow. Not a prediction of approval or rejection. | [2][1] |
| Rental income should be discounted in cautious borrowing models. | APRA guidance states a minimum 20% haircut on expected rental income, with larger haircuts where non-occupancy risk is higher. | Supported. Gross rent is not the serviceability number. | [3] |
| Negative gearing should not carry the borrowing decision. | APRA guidance says good practice places no reliance on potential future tax benefits from operating a rental property at a loss. | Supported. Keep tax effects outside the primary capacity test. | [3] |
| Borrowing calculators are planning tools, not approvals. | Moneysmart presents calculators as scenario tools, while ASIC and APRA sources require assessment and verification. | Supported. Use calculator SEO language with an approval caveat. | [11][5][3] |
| Pre-approval can fail at final approval. | The source base supports verification, valuation, suitability, and serviceability assessment before final credit approval. | Supported as a risk-control claim. Keep finance clauses and final approval conditions visible. | [5][3] |
| A lower advertised rate is not enough. | RBA lender-rate data, Moneysmart loan-comparison guidance, and APRA serviceability guidance point to rate, fees, term, features, and assessment treatment. | Supported. Compare repayment, comparison rate, fees, total interest, and serviceability. | [7][10][3] |
| ABS lending data is context, not a personal credit result. | ABS reports aggregate lending commitments. It does not assess an individual borrower file. | Supported. Use ABS for market context only, not personal borrowing-capacity proof. | [8] |
| Reddit and forums help find questions, not answers. | Forum themes are used only to identify common confusion about serviceability, pre-approval, DTI, rent haircuts, overtime, and broker estimates. | Supported by method. Official sources carry the factual claims. | |
| The report is not credit advice. | The page uses general public sources and does not include lender policy, the borrower file, valuation, or final credit assessment. | Supported. Replace report assumptions with lender documents before action. |
References
- [1] APRA: Macroprudential policy settings, June 2026 Checked 24 June 2026
- [2] APRA: Activating debt-to-income limits as a macroprudential policy tool Checked 24 June 2026
- [3] APRA: APG 223 Residential Mortgage Lending Checked 24 June 2026
- [4] APRA: Macroprudential policy credit measures Checked 24 June 2026
- [5] ASIC: Responsible lending Checked 24 June 2026
- [6] RBA: Cash Rate Target Checked 24 June 2026
- [7] RBA: Lenders Interest Rates Checked 24 June 2026
- [8] ABS: Lending Indicators, March Quarter 2026 Checked 24 June 2026
- [9] Moneysmart: Home loans Checked 24 June 2026
- [10] Moneysmart: Choosing a home loan Checked 24 June 2026
- [11] Moneysmart: Mortgage calculator Checked 24 June 2026
- [12] Moneysmart: Switching home loans Checked 24 June 2026
- [13] Moneysmart: Interest-only home loans Checked 24 June 2026