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More first-homebuyers chase dream

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Source: perthnow.com.au
Date: 9 March 2009
Photo Credit: Karin Calvert-Borshoff

THREE-quarters of first-homebuyers are planning to buy a house as lower interest rates and cheaper properties make their dream more affordable, a survey says.

Seventy-six per cent of respondents want to purchase a house, up from 54 per cent a year before, the 2009 Mortgage Choice survey of 1012 first-homebuyers shows.

It also found 16 per cent intended to buy a flat.

Mortgage Choice spokeswoman Kristy Sheppard said falling interest rates, stable house prices and the first-homeowner's grant boost had made property more affordable.

"Australians who are about to buy their first home appear to be entering the market with more confidence than their predecessors,'' Ms Sheppard said.

"It's great to see our survey results showing first-homebuyers-to-be are considering all of their options when it comes to owning their own place - whether it is a short-term savings plan to boost their deposit, making sacrifices to achieve their long-term goals, or buying with a partner to share the responsibility.''

Since September, the Reserve Bank of Australia has lowered official interest rates by four percentage points to a 45-year low of 3.25 per cent.

In mid-October, the Federal Government doubled the first-homeowner's grant for established dwellings to $14,000 and tripled it to $21,000 for newly built houses.

Ms Sheppard said while loan repayments could rise considerably in time, houses had become cheaper recently.

"Home ownership, for many, is at present a realistic achievement,'' she said.

Eight per cent of respondents intending to purchase before the end of 2009 indicated they would rely just on the Government's grant, while another eight per cent had not started saving but would do so before buying.

The time that it took to repay a mortgage concerned 52 per cent of first home buyers, while 47 per cent were worried about not making the loan repayments, the survey said.

Fewer respondents said they would make sacrifices to buy a home, 71 per cent from 91 per cent a year earlier.

Reducing spending was the greatest form of sacrifice, nominated by 93 per cent of respondents. This was followed by forgoing a holiday, 59 per cent.

Ms Sheppard said some sacrifices would have to be made to own a home.

"The number of people planning to sacrifice is considerably down on last year's figures, which might indicate first-homebuyers-to-be are in a better financial position than those before them and are taking advantage of the first-homeowner boost and improved market conditions as a means to get their foot in the door sooner,'' she said.

The Australian Bureau of Statistics will release housing finance commitments for January on Wednesday.

The median market forecast is for a three per cent rise.
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