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The ABS released the Lending Indicators data for the December quarter 2025 today, which provides the latest statistics on housing finance commitments.
“The Australian government’s 5 per cent deposit scheme was expanded at the start of October 2025 and looks to be helping more first home buyers into the market,” added Mr Devitt.
“This is a positive development given the structural disadvantages first home buyers face in obtaining a mortgage and realising the dream of homeownership.
“Over a decade of post-GFC lending restrictions have been aimed at creating an ‘unquestionably strong’ financial sector but have also increasingly squeezed out first home buyers from the market.
“A strong financial sector is key to a well-functioning Australian economy but a regulatory environment that is so restrictive that banks are prevented from taking on fair commercial risks associated with mortgage lending to average households, is not a well-functioning environment.
“Individual macroprudential restrictions have been justified on the basis of improving financial stability, including investor lending benchmarks, caps on interest-only lending, higher serviceability buffers and limits on high debt-to-income lending.
“But the cumulative impact of these restrictions has not been properly assessed or balanced against the needs of aspiring homeowners.
“Mortgage default rates have remained incredibly low in Australia and progressively greater restrictions on lending don’t appear to have improved the situation further.
“As lending restrictions accumulate, there is little reassessment of whether they remain proportionate to the risks they were designed to address, or who ultimately bears their cost.
“Cumulative tightening of housing finance has reduced housing supply responsiveness, worsened equity and impaired efficiency,” concluded Mr Devitt.
The number of loans issued nationally in the December quarter 2025 to first home buyers increased in most jurisdictions, led by New South Wales (+10.9 per cent) and Western Australia (+9.8 per cent), and followed by the Australian Capital Territory (+7.1 per cent), Queensland (+6.4 per cent), South Australia (+4.8 per cent), Victoria (+3.5 per cent) and the Northern Territory (+3.2 per cent). Tasmania saw the only decline for the quarter, down by 1.7 per cent.
Over the past few weeks HIA has been advocating strongly on behalf of members on a range of policy and regulatory issues that have significant implications for housing supply, business confidence and the capacity of our industry to deliver the homes Australia needs.
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) has today written to the Tasmanian Government calling for a commitment that state-funded and state-partnered housing work will continue to be awarded on merit, not industrial arrangements, warning new federal procurement rules could shrink the pool of builders able to deliver the homes Tasmania needs.
The Victorian Government continues to push ahead with its Working from Home laws despite the Housing Industry Association’s (HIA) call for it to abandon its proposed legislation, warning the changes would impose additional regulatory pressure on businesses already struggling and kill productivity.
Hobart has been identified as the most restrictive capital city in Australia for planning, according to the Australian Zoning Atlas, which found 97 per cent of the city's residential land is subject to restrictions that limit new housing.