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Are too many takeaway coffees and Netflix stopping you getting into the property market? - featured image
Brett Warren
By Brett Warren
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Are too many takeaway coffees and Netflix stopping you getting into the property market?

Clearly, it's harder for young Australians to save their deposit to get into the property market.

And it's nothing new this to be blamed on their unnecessary spending.

I remember a couple of years ago leading demographer Bernard Salt wrote a column linking the inability of many young Aussies to enter the housing market with their love of eating expensive smashed avocado breakfasts in trendy inner-city cafes.

"I have seen young people order smashed avocado with crumbled feta on five-grain toasted bread at $22 a pop and more.

I can afford to eat this for lunch because I am middle-aged and have raised my family.

But how can young people afford to eat like this? Shouldn’t they be economising by eating at home?

How often are they eating out? Twenty-two dollars several times a week could go towards a deposit on a house.”

Now, this may not be true but where can a prospective purchaser save a few dollars?

What about takeaway coffee?

Analysis by Finder.com.au analysis shows that prospective homebuyers in Sydney would need to give up 52,191 takeaway coffees to save enough for the average deposit.

That’s equivalent to a coffee a day for 143 years – nearly twice the average lifespan.

How much would you need to give up to afford a home deposit?

Here's a breakdown of exactly how long you would have to go without your favourite things to save for a home deposit in each capital city.

City Median property price Coffees Years of Netflix Bottles of wine Meals out Tanks of petrol
Sydney $1,116,889 52,191 1,694 13,961 11,169 1,867
Melbourne $805,232 35,709 1,221 10,390 8,052 1,303
Brisbane $749,293 32,228 1,136 8,325 7,493 1,163
Adelaide $602,717 26,967 914 6,888 6,697 1,497
Perth $542,338 23,127 822 7,231 5,423 1,014

And now rising rents are adding an extra burden.

We all know the cost of living is going up, making it difficult to save that elusive deposit, but now many prospective first home buyers are being hit a double whammy of the rising cost of living and rising rents making it harder to save.

And with the shortage of rental properties and historically low vacancy rates, rents are only going to keep rising.

Units Median Asking Rents April 2022 Median Asking Rents April 2022

Brett Warren
About Brett Warren Brett Warren is National Director of Metropole Properties and uses his two decades of property investment experience to advise clients how to grow, protect and pass on their wealth through strategic property advice.
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