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Borrowing Power on $225,000 Combined (Couple)

How much a couple earning $225,000 combined can borrow for a home loan. Based on bank assessment rates and the 30% serviceability rule.

Last verified: 5 May 2026

On $225,000 combined, a couple could borrow approximately $683,745

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

Monthly repayment

$4,209.93

at 6.25% over 30 years

Fortnightly repayment

$1,943.05

at 6.25% over 30 years

Weekly repayment

$971.52

at 6.25% over 30 years

What $683,745 Buys You

How your $683,745 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 $236,255
Melbourne$800,000$640,000Yes
Brisbane$780,000$624,000Yes
Perth$700,000$560,000Yes
Adelaide$720,000$576,000Yes
Hobart$650,000$520,000Yes
Canberra$850,000$680,000Yes
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 $683,745 borrowing power.

Deposit %Max propertyDepositEst. LMI
5%$719,731$35,987$23,931
10%$759,716$75,972$12,307
20%(no LMI)$854,681$170,936$0

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

Monthly Repayments at Current Rates

RateMonthlyFortnightlyvs 6.25%
5.5%$3,882.23$1,791.80-$327.71/mo
6%$4,099.40$1,892.03-$110.54/mo
6.25%(current)$4,209.93$1,943.05
6.5%$4,321.73$1,994.65+$111.80/mo
7%$4,548.97$2,099.53+$339.04/mo
7.5%$4,780.84$2,206.54+$570.91/mo

What Reduces Your Borrowing Power

HECS-HELP debt

Compulsory repayments are deducted from income before assessment

-$68,374

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 $23,931) and shows lenders you're a lower risk
  • Longer loan term — a 35-year term increases borrowing power to approximately $700,721 ($16,976 more)
  • Add a co-borrower — combining incomes significantly increases capacity
  • Reduce living expenses — lower declared expenses mean more income available for repayments

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 $683,745 loan:

5% deposit (95% LVR)

$23,931

on $719,731 property

10% deposit (90% LVR)

$12,307

on $759,716 property

15% deposit (85% LVR)

$5,470

on $804,406 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 a couple borrow on $225,000 combined?

A couple earning $225,000 combined could borrow approximately $683,745 for a home loan. Banks assess your combined ability to repay at 9.25% (current rate plus 3% buffer), using up to 30% of gross combined income.

Can a couple on $225,000 buy a house?

With $683,745 borrowing power, a couple could buy a property worth $854,681 with a 20% deposit. This is enough for a median-priced home in Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide, Hobart, Canberra, Darwin.

What deposit does a couple on $225,000 need?

A 20% deposit of $170,936 avoids LMI and lets you purchase up to $854,681. A 5% deposit of $35,987 is possible but adds approximately $23,931 in LMI.

Sourced from

1 primary source
  • RBA-Cash-RateRBA Statement
    RBA cash rate target

    Cash rate target set by the RBA Board. Mortgage rates broadly track cash rate movements. Last verified rate baked into mortgage and offset calculators is the most recent published target.

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