Home β€Ί Mortgage Calculator β€Ί Queensland
πŸ—ΊοΈ Queensland (QLD)

Mortgage Calculator β€” Queensland

Free mortgage calculator for Queensland residents. Queensland-specific rates, 2025 data and QLD local pricing guide.

πŸ“ Queensland (QLD) β€” Key Financial Data 2025

Average house price: $700,000  |  Average weekly rent: $580/week
Stamp duty note: FHBs get up to $8,750 stamp duty rebate on homes under $550K.
Fuel average: 175–210c/L  |  Minimum wage: $24.10/hr

⚑ Mortgage Calculator
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Mortgage Calculator for Queensland Residents β€” 2025

This calculator uses the same Australian-standard formulas as the national tool, with specific guidance for Queensland (QLD) residents. Key QLD-specific financial considerations are highlighted below.

Queensland Property Market β€” 2025 Overview

The Queensland property market in 2025 has an average house price of approximately $700,000 across the Brisbane metropolitan area, with regional QLD properties typically trading at 20–40% below capital city prices. Average weekly rents in Queensland run approximately $580/week for houses, with units averaging 15–25% less.

Queensland Stamp Duty

FHBs get up to $8,750 stamp duty rebate on homes under $550K. Always verify current thresholds with the Queensland State Revenue Office or a licensed conveyancer before exchange.

Income Tax in Queensland

QLD residents pay standard federal income tax. Queensland has no additional state income tax. The standard ATO federal income tax rates and thresholds apply to all QLD residents.

GST in Queensland

Standard 10% GST applies across QLD. Regional QLD businesses may have reduced compliance costs.

Queensland Trade Rates (for hourly rate context)

TradeQLD Rate (2025)
Paving$80–$125/hr
Builder$85–$135/hr
Electrician$95–$145/hr
Frequently Asked Questions
How much can I borrow in Australia?

Most lenders apply a debt-to-income ratio of 6–7x gross income. On a $100,000 salary, you may borrow $550,000–$700,000 subject to your expenses, existing debts and APRA's 3% serviceability buffer. Your actual borrowing capacity varies significantly by lender and your financial circumstances.

What is the difference between fixed and variable rates?

Variable rates move with the RBA cash rate β€” offering flexibility (extra repayments, offset accounts) but uncertainty. Fixed rates lock in a set rate for 1–5 years β€” offering certainty but usually no offset and break costs if you exit early. Many Australians split their loan between fixed and variable portions.

What is LMI and how can I avoid it?

Lenders Mortgage Insurance (LMI) is required when your deposit is under 20% of the purchase price (LVR above 80%). It protects the lender (not you) and can cost $5,000–$40,000+ depending on loan size. To avoid it: save a 20% deposit, use a guarantor, or access government schemes like the First Home Guarantee which allows eligible FHBs to buy with 5% deposit and no LMI.

What is a comparison rate?

A comparison rate combines the interest rate and most fees into a single annual percentage showing the true loan cost. It makes comparing loans from different lenders more straightforward. Always compare comparison rates β€” a low headline rate with high fees can cost more over time than a slightly higher rate with no fees.