I’ve just found out that the Australian First Home Owner Grant bonus ($14,000 for existing property and $21,000 for new property), is unlikely to continue.
PRIME Minister Kevin Rudd has confirmed the first home buyers grant will not be extended past its deadline of June 30.
Under the government’s $1.5 billion first home buyers boost, the first home buyers grant was doubled from $7000 to $14,000 last October.
Those first home buyers who purchase a new home receive an extra $7000 to take the total cost of government assistance to $21,000.
The construction and real estate industries have hailed the boost with some calling on it to be continued.
They have voiced fears that if the grant is removed the real estate market will collapse.
The Real Estate Institute of Queensland (REIQ) described the move as ”very disappointing” and called on the Government for more stimulus measures.
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Read more at News.com.au
There’s been a lot of speculation about whether the First Home Owner Grant Bonus would continue or not through the current economic situation, and as a first home owner myself, I had some mixed feelings about it. On one hand you get an extra $7,000 incentive to get into the property market, on the other hand the property prices may be more inflated than they should be.
Either way, I’ve been having a look at what’s out on the market… it’ll be a matter of time before I get my hands on one regardless of the First Home Owner Grant incentive. I’m quite interested in what property prices will look like when the last of the First Home Owner Grant buyers are out of the market.
My economics tells me that when demand falls, price falls….



Many people come to me and ask: “Is this the right time to buy?” My question to them is, “Is this for investment or yourself to live in?” I find asking this question re-frames their mindset, because many of them will reply: “…Yes, I want to live in it…”