SavingsMate

Borrowing Power on $150,000 With HECS Debt

How much you can borrow on a $150,000 salary when you have HECS-HELP debt. See how compulsory repayments reduce your capacity.

Last verified: 1 July 2025

On $150,000 with HECS debt, you could borrow approximately $414,805

Based on 9.25% assessment rate (6.25% + 3% buffer) and 30% serviceability ratio over 30 years.

HECS repayment of $13,500/year (9.0% rate) deducted from income before assessment. Without HECS, borrowing power would be $455,830 — a reduction of $41,025.

Monthly repayment

$2,554.03

at 6.25% over 30 years

Fortnightly repayment

$1,178.78

at 6.25% over 30 years

Weekly repayment

$589.39

at 6.25% over 30 years

What $414,805 Buys You

How your $414,805 borrowing power compares to median house prices across Australian capital cities (with a 20% deposit).

CityMedianLoan needed (80%)Affordable?
Sydney$1,150,000$920,000Short $505,195
Melbourne$800,000$640,000Short $225,195
Brisbane$780,000$624,000Short $209,195
Perth$700,000$560,000Short $145,195
Adelaide$720,000$576,000Short $161,195
Hobart$650,000$520,000Short $105,195
Canberra$850,000$680,000Short $265,195
Darwin$500,000$400,000Yes

Median prices are approximate mid-2025 figures. Actual prices vary by suburb.

Deposit Needed

How much deposit you need for different property values with $414,805 borrowing power.

Deposit %Max propertyDepositEst. LMI
5%$436,637$21,832$16,592
10%$460,895$46,089$7,466
20%(no LMI)$518,506$103,701$0

LMI estimates are approximate. Actual LMI varies by lender, loan amount, and LVR.

Monthly Repayments at Current Rates

RateMonthlyFortnightlyvs 6.25%
5.5%$2,355.22$1,087.02-$198.81/mo
6%$2,486.97$1,147.83-$67.06/mo
6.25%(current)$2,554.03$1,178.78
6.5%$2,621.85$1,210.08+$67.82/mo
7%$2,759.71$1,273.71+$205.68/mo
7.5%$2,900.38$1,338.64+$346.35/mo

What Reduces Your Borrowing Power

Credit card ($10K limit)

Banks assume 3% of your credit limit as a monthly commitment, even if paid in full

-$36,466

Car loan ($500/month)

Existing debt repayments directly reduce serviceability

-$60,777

Each dependant

Banks add ~$400/month per dependant to living expenses

-$48,622

How to Increase Your Borrowing Power

  • Pay off debts first — closing a $10K credit card could add $36,466 to your borrowing power
  • Save a bigger deposit — a 20% deposit avoids LMI (saving $16,592) and shows lenders you're a lower risk
  • Longer loan term — a 35-year term increases borrowing power to approximately $425,104 ($10,299 more)
  • Add a co-borrower — combining incomes significantly increases capacity
  • Reduce living expenses — lower declared expenses mean more income available for repayments
  • Pay off HECS voluntarily — removing the $13,500/year repayment would add $41,025 to your borrowing power

Lenders Mortgage Insurance (LMI)

LMI is required when your deposit is less than 20% of the property value. Here's what you'd pay on a $414,805 loan:

5% deposit (95% LVR)

$14,518

on $436,637 property

10% deposit (90% LVR)

$7,466

on $460,895 property

15% deposit (85% LVR)

$3,318

on $488,006 property

LMI can often be added to the loan (capitalised), but this increases your total debt. First home buyers may be eligible for the First Home Guarantee which allows a 5% deposit with no LMI.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much can I borrow on $150,000 with HECS?

On $150,000 with a HECS-HELP debt, your borrowing power is approximately $414,805. The compulsory HECS repayment of $13,500/year (9.0% of income) reduces your borrowing capacity by approximately $41,025 compared to someone without HECS.

Does HECS affect borrowing power?

Yes. Banks deduct your compulsory HECS repayment from your income before calculating serviceability. On $150,000, your HECS repayment of $13,500/year reduces your effective income to $136,500, lowering your maximum loan by approximately $41,025.

Should I pay off HECS before buying a house?

Paying off HECS before buying would increase your borrowing power by approximately $41,025. However, HECS is indexed at CPI (not a real interest rate), so the money might be better used as a larger deposit to avoid LMI. It depends on your deposit savings and the property you're targeting.

General information and estimates only — not financial, tax, or legal advice. Always verify with a licensed adviser or the ATO.