How can I help my kids get into property?

Fact Checked
Updated 12/07/2024
How can I help my kids get into property?

Time to read : 5 Minutes

As fast as your adult children are saving a deposit for their first home, you might be watching the price they need to pay pushing higher and further away from them. 

And if you’re a parent with a bit of financial security, you may be asking what you can do to help when:

  • property prices are relentlessly growing 

  • interest rates are high and volatile 

  • your kids’ borrowing power is being crushed. 

Well, Aussies who have a leg up from what’s become known as the Bank of Mum and Dad are twice as likely to get on the property ladder, says the Transitions into home ownership report from the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute (AHURI). 

What are the options to help your younger generation into their first home? And what risks do they carry? 

The gift of cash

A deposit ‘donation’ can be welcomed. It can assist with both the high deposit now needed and the lower borrowing power. 

From your child’s point of view, to get any loan approved, a lender will still want to see a history of solid saving, suggesting they will cope with mortgage repayments. 

Besides, I’m a firm believer that the buyer should have ‘pain in the game’. It both ‘invests them’ in the process and increases the satisfaction of the purchase. 

Offer to match their contribution… maybe. 

From parents’ point of view, the risk of the gift of cash is that they might lose it… due to defaulting on the mortgage or in the case of a separation.  

Did you know parental property help is largely responsible for a big spike in prenups or binding financial agreements in Australia? If made right, one of these can mitigate at least this risk. 

A will can also be used to keep things equitable with other kids, if relevant – for example, $50,000 gifted early to one can be balanced with $50,000 extra left to another. 

Be aware: if you’re retired you can only give away $10,000 a year or $50,000 over five years before it affects the age pension. 

This is considered a deprivation of your assets and the excess will still count in the tests for eligibility, the assets test and deemed income test. 

Before you retire though, there are no greater implications as there is no ‘gift tax’ in Australia. 

The gift of equity

Another option is to keep your cash but tap into the equity in your own house. And this will suit better if you – like many Baby Boomers – are asset rich but cash poor. 

You can ‘go guarantor’ for your adult children’s property purchase by putting up a chunk of equity from your own home as security for the new loan. 

A double advantage of this – for your kids – is if it brings the amount they have to borrow to less than 80% (called the loan-to-value ratio), they avoid expensive lenders mortgage insurance (LMI). This can save them tens of thousands of dollars and can further aid their purchase. 

For you however, you are putting your house on the line: if they get into financial strife and fail to make repayments, you could lose it. For this reason, it is a risky move. 

One way of lowering your exposure is to ‘put up’ the minimum equity possible.  

You could plan to refinance out of the loan – and remove yourself as guarantor – as soon as the new property (hopefully) grows enough to allow it. 

If this sounds too worrying, regardless, you could instead downsize your family home to actually extract equity… and distribute the profits as you see fit (bearing in mind the ‘sharing-cash’ considerations mentioned above). 

You could also access equity without selling your family home. This is possible if you’re working and can make the repayments, and have a mortgage that lets you redraw surplus money or draw down on a line of credit.  

If you are 60 or older, you could take out a commercial reverse mortgage or take up the Services Australia Home Equity Access Scheme (from age 67). These are repaid from the sale of your home when you die (or earlier if sold). 

In any case, that binding financial agreement to protect against your child’s partnership going sour (and maybe an equalising will for any other children) is also essential here. 

Then there are options to assist your kids that are a little more, well, complicated… 

The gift of ‘property’ itself

Perhaps you have a ‘spare’ property… and have wondered: “Could I sign it over to my child?”

Unfortunately, not without triggering – probably significant – capital gains and stamp duty. This is not the case if they later inherit it.

There is another idea, though, that might work and be relevant if you are, a little more concerned about your kids – or more accurately their financial acumen: you can help them into housing via a trust structure. 

Here, you would buy the property within a family trust and you would be the trustee of that trust.

It would be an investment property like any other, rented by your son and daughter with your expenses tax deductible. 

If you later felt it was right, you could pass control of the trust over to them, which might be free of capital gains tax and stamp duty if a company was also included as a trustee.

Be aware: this strategy would certainly require additional legal and accounting advice. 

Bottom Line

According to the AHURI report, today’s first home buyer now takes more than six years to save a house deposit in Sydney and Melbourne. 

If you’d like to help your kids get on the property ladder – and you’re in a position to do it – whichever way you go about it, the Bank of Mum and Dad can significantly cut that time. 

Go deeper:

Financial Disclaimer

The information contained on this web page is of general nature only and has been prepared without taking into consideration your objectives, needs and financial situation. You should check with a financial professional before making any decisions. Any opinions expressed within an article are those of the author and do not specifically reflect the views of Compare Club Australia Pty Ltd.


About the author
author Nicole Pedersen-McKinnon

From regular TV appearances talking about personal finance to travelling the country speaking at schools and to adults on being money-wise, Nicole Pedersen-McKinnon is on a mission to help Aussies get savvy, solvent and financially secure. 

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