Australia’s mortgage burden is now above 1989 levels – when interest rates were 17%
KPMG analysis reveals Australia's current national mortgage burden is heavier than in the late 1980s, despite significantly lower interest rates. Urban economist Terry Rawnsley stated this research aims to counter claims that previous generations faced greater housing affordability challenges.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedKPMG analysis reveals Australia's current national mortgage burden is heavier than in the late 1980s, despite significantly lower interest rates. Urban economist Terry Rawnsley stated this research aims to counter claims that previous generations faced greater housing affordability challenges. In early 1990, interest payments represented 5.7% of household income, while by early 2026, this figure is projected to reach nearly 6% with interest rates around 8.3%. This increase is attributed to soaring home values leading to higher borrowing amounts, even as home ownership rates have declined. While acknowledging past challenges like higher unemployment, the data suggests borrowers have faced tougher conditions recently, with mortgage repayment becoming a source of anxiety rather than security.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedHomeowners in the past faced tougher conditions over the past few years than in the late 1980s/early 90s.
In early 1990, interest payments as a share of household income reached 5.7% (5.7% total: 3.4% home loan, 2.3% consumer debt).
Australia's national mortgage burden is heavier now than when lending rates were 17% in the late 1980s.
Housing affordability is at its worst on record stretching back to 1994.
In early 2026, households will dedicate 5.4% of income to mortgages, rising to nearly 6% with recent rate hikes.