If you’ve been sitting on the sidelines watching Sydney’s property market, you’re probably asking the same question everyone else is: what can I actually borrow right now?

It’s a fair question — and the honest answer is more nuanced than a quick Google search will give you. Borrowing power in 2026 depends on a stack of factors that most calculators don’t fully account for. Let’s break it down plainly.

Where the Cash Rate Sits — and Why It Matters

The Reserve Bank held the cash rate at 4.35% at its June 2026 meeting. That follows three consecutive rises earlier in the year, and most economists don’t expect cuts before 2027 at the earliest. Westpac is actually forecasting another two rises — to 4.85% — in August and September.

What does that mean for borrowers? Higher rates directly squeeze what banks will lend you. And because lenders are required to stress-test your application at a minimum 3% buffer above the actual rate, you’re currently being assessed at close to 7.35% — or higher if Westpac is right and rates climb further.

To put that in concrete terms: since February 2026, the average borrower’s capacity has dropped by around 5%. And compared to early 2022 — before the rate hiking cycle began — most people are borrowing roughly 40% less than they could have. That’s not a rounding error. That’s hundreds of thousands of dollars off the table.

What Sydney Buyers Are Actually Dealing With

The median Sydney house price sits around $1.62 million. Units are around $870,000. Prices have softened — down about 2.1% from the November 2025 peak — but they’re still at levels that require serious borrowing power to access.

Auction clearance rates in Sydney have been tracking in the low-to-mid 40s — the weakest since April 2020. New listings are up. Home sales are down 17% year-on-year. If you’re a buyer, this is actually one of the better negotiating environments in years. But only if you’ve got your finance sorted.

That’s the catch. The market has more room than it has in a long time, but your borrowing capacity has also pulled back. The buyers winning right now are the ones who went to a broker first — got a realistic number, got pre-approved, and could act when they found the right place.

The Numbers: What Changes Your Borrowing Power?

These are the main levers banks look at when they work out how much to lend you:

The reason this matters: online calculators don’t know which lender weights what. A broker does. The difference between lender A and lender B can be $100,000 to $150,000 in borrowing capacity — for the same income and same situation.

First Home Buyers: Don’t Forget What’s Still Available

If this is your first purchase, there are still meaningful schemes running in NSW that affect your bottom line:

These schemes don’t automatically combine. An experienced mortgage broker will map out what you’re eligible for and how to structure things so you’re not leaving money on the table.

Refinancing: Is Now a Smart Move?

With rates elevated, a lot of people are sitting on loans that are costing more than they should be. Lenders reserve their best rates for new customers — that’s just how the game works. If you haven’t refinanced in the last 18 months and haven’t negotiated with your current lender, there’s a reasonable chance you’re paying over the odds.

Even in a high-rate environment, the spread between the best and worst variable rates on the market can be 0.5% to 0.8%. On a $700,000 loan, that’s $3,500 to $5,600 per year. Worth a conversation.

The one thing to watch: refinancing costs money (discharge fees, new application fees, potential break costs if you’re on a fixed rate). You need to know your break-even point. A good broker will run those numbers for you before recommending you move.

What to Do Before You Apply

If you’re planning to buy in Sydney in the next six months, here’s what actually moves the needle:

The Bottom Line

Borrowing power in Sydney right now is tighter than it’s been in years — but it hasn’t disappeared. The people succeeding in this market are the ones who know their real number, have their paperwork ready, and understand which lender suits their situation.

If you want a straight answer on what you can borrow — not an estimate from a calculator, but an actual assessment of your situation — that’s exactly what we do at Loan Connect. We work with a broad panel of lenders and we’ll find you the best fit for where you’re at right now.

Book a free call with our team and let’s work out your number.

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