First-time buyer found a property they love at $680,000 in Queensland and they have $90,000 saved. Before they make an offer, they need to know if they actually have enough -- including everything.
Most states also offer stamp duty concessions or exemptions for first home buyers below price thresholds.
1 What this calculator does
Calculates the full upfront cost of purchasing a property for first home buyers in Australia. Includes deposit, stamp duty (with state FHB concessions and exemptions), LMI if applicable, FHOG grant, conveyancing, building inspection and pest inspection. Shows the total cash required at settlement.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
Total cash required = Deposit + Stamp duty + LMI + Conveyancing + Inspections - FHOG grant
LMI rate:
LVR 90-95%: approx 3.8% of loan
LVR 85-90%: approx 2.2% of loan
LVR 80-85%: approx 1.2% of loan
FHOG (new property only): QLD $30,000 | NSW $10,000 | VIC $10,000 | WA $10,000 | SA $15,000 | TAS $30,000
Many first home buyers underestimate total upfront costs by 3-8% of the purchase price. The FHOG grant (if eligible) is only available for new properties in most states, not established homes. Stamp duty concessions for first home buyers vary significantly by state and property price -- properties above the exemption threshold still pay duty at a concessional or full rate. LMI is capitalised into the loan and increases total repayments over the loan term.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
Stamp duty QLD FHB threshold $700,000 -- price is below so stamp duty is approximately $0 (exempt) | LVR: 90% -- LMI: $612,000 x 0.022 = $13,464 | Conveyancing: $1,500 | Building inspection: $600 | Pest inspection: $350 | FHOG: $0 (established property)Stamp duty NSW FHB: $900,000 is above the $800K full-exemption threshold, between $800K-$1M concessional | NSW FHB concession at $900K: approx $9,000 (50% concession on normal duty of ~$35,000) | LMI at 85% LVR: $765,000 x 0.012 = $9,180 | Conveyancing and inspections: $2,450Stamp duty VIC FHB threshold $600,000 -- exempt at $580,000 = $0 | LMI at 95% LVR: $551,000 x 0.038 = $20,938 | FHOG: $10,000 (new property) | Conveyancing and inspections: $2,4504 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Treating all savings as available deposit | Not separating savings from the funds needed for costs | Insufficient cash at settlement -- loan is approved but settlement fails | Calculate total upfront costs first. Available deposit = Total savings minus stamp duty, conveyancing, inspections and a cash buffer. |
| Expecting FHOG for an established property | Not reading the eligibility criteria | Relying on a $10,000-$30,000 grant that does not materialise | FHOG is only available for new properties (off-the-plan or new builds) in most Australian states. Established homes are typically excluded. |
| Not checking if the purchase price is above the FHB exemption threshold | Assuming all FHBs pay no stamp duty | Unexpected stamp duty bill of $10,000-$40,000 | Check your state's current FHB exemption threshold. Above the threshold, full or concessional stamp duty applies. |
| Underestimating building and pest inspection costs | Treating them as optional to save money | Buying a property with structural issues or pest infestation | Building and pest inspections at $600-$1,000 total are the best money spent in a property purchase. Never waive them to strengthen an offer unless you are prepared to accept the risk. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
Common tools used alongside this one: