APRA’s 3% Serviceability Buffer — Why It Limits How Much You Can Borrow
When you apply for a home loan, the bank doesn’t calculate your repayments at your actual interest rate. They add a 3% buffer required by APRA (Australian Prudential Regulation Authority). This single rule shapes how much you can borrow.
What the Buffer Is
APRA introduced the 3-percentage-point buffer in October 2021 (replacing a 2.5% buffer). When assessing your serviceability, the lender calculates your monthly repayments as if your rate were 3% higher than the actual offered rate.
If you’re applying for a variable loan at 5.85%, the bank tests whether you can afford repayments at 8.85%.
Why APRA Imposes It
The buffer is designed to ensure borrowers can still pay if rates rise — a lesson from the early-2020s rate cycle. Without the buffer, lenders would have been writing loans that defaulted en masse when the RBA raised rates 13 times in 18 months.
How It Affects Your Borrowing Capacity
On a household income of $150,000 (net ~$108,000 after tax and basic expenses), the buffer cuts borrowing capacity by roughly 15%–25% versus what your actual repayments would suggest.
| Scenario | Actual rate | Test rate (rate + 3%) | Max loan supported |
|---|---|---|---|
| Variable 5.85% | 5.85% | 8.85% | ~$750,000 |
| 2-yr fixed 5.55% | 5.55% | 8.55% | ~$780,000 |
| Without buffer | 5.85% | 5.85% | ~$910,000 |
Those numbers are rough — actual figures depend on dependents, other debts, and lender-specific living-expense calculators.
Where the Buffer Bites Hardest
- First-home buyers with no other deposits to lean on
- Higher-income borrowers who are otherwise prudent but find borrowing capped below where they expected
- Investment property buyers stacking up multiple loans
- Recent rate-cut beneficiaries — the buffer hasn’t dropped along with rates
Workarounds (Legitimate)
- Larger deposit — reduces loan size, fits within buffered capacity
- Reduce credit-card limits — banks count your total limit as potential debt, not just current balance. Cancel unused cards before applying.
- Pay off personal loans and BNPL — these reduce serviceability dramatically
- Multiple income earners — adding a working spouse’s income raises capacity
- Non-bank lenders — some smaller lenders use slightly different serviceability calculators (though still bound by the 3% buffer)
What’s NOT a Workaround
- Lying about expenses — banks check via Comprehensive Credit Reporting and statement scraping
- Falsifying income — fraud risk
- Promising future raises — banks count documented past income only
When APRA Might Adjust
There’s been chatter about reducing the buffer to 2.5% in 2026 to reflect lower current rates. If that happens, borrowing capacity would jump 5%–10% overnight — but APRA hasn’t yet signalled the move. Don’t budget for it.
Bottom Line
The 3% serviceability buffer is real, immovable, and the biggest invisible constraint on Aussie borrowing. Plan your purchase around buffered repayments, not your current actual repayments — and clean up other debts before applying.