Mortgage stress is sweeping across the nation, and new data has revealed the suburbs feeling the heat the most.
From outer-city battlegrounds to regional towns on the brink, rising interest rates and soaring living costs are pushing homeowners to breaking point.
If you think your suburb is immune, think again – the financial strain is spreading, and it’s not always where you’d expect.
Take Toowoomba in Queensland, where a staggering 74 per cent of homeowners are grappling with mortgage stress, or Craigieburn in Victoria, which tops the nation for late repayments.
In Forrestfield, Western Australia, nearly five per cent of mortgages are in arrears, while coastal towns like Budgewoi in New South Wales are struggling with the state’s highest rate of missed housing loan repayments.
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These suburbs are just the tip of the iceberg in a growing crisis that’s reshaping Australia’s property landscape.
According to Dennis Cowper, Director of Real Credit Repairers, the financial pressure on Australian households is no accident.
“Australians are still taking on record levels of housing debt – loan commitments remain more than 30 per cent above pre-pandemic levels,” he explains.
“People haven’t stopped borrowing, but they are stretching themselves further than ever to get into the market.”
Australia’s top 10 credit stress hotspots
The reasons behind this financial strain are as varied as the suburbs themselves.
In outer-metro growth corridors like Craigieburn (VIC), Pakenham (VIC), and Palmerston (NT), families stretched their budgets to buy homes during the property boom, locking in large mortgages when interest rates were at record lows.
Now, with rates climbing and inflation driving up everyday costs, many households are finding themselves in uncharted territory, struggling to keep up with repayments.
Regional centres like Toowoomba in Queensland and Elizabeth in South Australia face their own challenges, with older housing stock and long-term unemployment compounding the issue.
Meanwhile, lifestyle towns such as Nerang in Queensland and Budgewoi in New South Wales are feeling the aftershocks of post-Covid job market shifts, leaving many residents exposed to financial stress.
It’s a perfect storm of rising repayments, stagnant wages, and increasing living costs that’s hitting homeowners where it hurts the most – their mortgages.
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Top 10 suburbs with the best credit health
Cowper points out that first-home buyers are particularly vulnerable to these pressures.
“First-home buyers now make up more than 40 per cent of loans in the Northern Territory and the ACT, but their share is slipping in NSW and Queensland. That split tells us affordability is blocking new entrants in the big markets, while smaller states are seeing younger households pile in,” he says.
The numbers back this up.
“The average new home loan has blown out to over $800,000 in New South Wales and more than $660,000 in Queensland,” Cowper adds.
“Even with low interest rates, those balances are enormous and leave households exposed if conditions change.”
But while some suburbs are buckling under the pressure, others are thriving.
In affluent areas like Mosman in New South Wales and Toorak in Victoria, homeowners are staying ahead of the curve, buoyed by high incomes, stable property values, and access to financial advice.
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Rising interest rates and soaring living costs are pushing homeowners to breaking point.
These suburbs are proving resilient, with residents proactively managing debt and avoiding risky loans.
The divide between Australia’s property haves and have-nots has never been more stark.
What does this mean for everyday Australians? More than you might think.
Lenders use postcode data to assess risk, meaning living in a high-stress suburb could impact your ability to secure a competitive mortgage or refinance your home loan.
On the flip side, strong credit health in a suburb can boost local property values, improve access to finance, and create a more stable economy.
Cowper warns that the signs of financial strain are already showing in household behaviour. “Households are shuffling debt just to stay afloat – refinancing volumes are at record highs and personal loan commitments have doubled to $9 billion a quarter. That’s a clear sign people are leaning on unsecured credit to cover the basics,” he says.