Reverse Mortgages in Australia: An Honest Guide
A reverse mortgage allows homeowners aged 60+ to access equity in their home without selling. No repayments are required during your lifetime. But the costs and risks deserve careful consideration before proceeding.
How a Reverse Mortgage Works
You borrow against your home's value. The loan — plus compounding interest — is repaid when you sell the property, move permanently into aged care, or your estate settles after you pass away. Unlike a standard mortgage, no monthly payments are required.
Important: All Australian reverse mortgages include a statutory no-negative-equity guarantee (NNEG). You or your estate can never owe more than your home's value at the time of sale, regardless of how much the loan has grown.
The Pros
- Access cash without selling your home
- No repayments required during your lifetime
- No negative equity guarantee — protected by law
- Flexible drawdown options — lump sum, regular income or cash reserve
- Proceeds generally don't affect Age Pension for 12 months (gifting rules apply after)
- Can fund home modifications, healthcare, lifestyle improvements or aged care deposits
The Cons — Read These Carefully
- Compound interest grows rapidly: At 9% p.a., a $100,000 loan becomes $237,000 after 10 years and $560,000 after 20 years — even without borrowing another dollar
- Reduces inheritance: Less equity remaining for your estate or children
- May affect aged care planning: Reduced equity could affect your ability to fund a RAD (lump sum aged care deposit) later
- Property must remain your primary residence: Extended absences or moving into care can trigger repayment
- Commercial rates are high: Commercial reverse mortgages currently charge 8.5–9.3% p.a. — significantly more than standard mortgages
Commercial vs Government HEAS — A Critical Comparison
| Feature | Commercial Reverse Mortgage | Government HEAS |
|---|---|---|
| Interest Rate | 8.5–9.3% p.a. | 3.95% p.a. (fixed) |
| Eligibility | Age 60+, homeowner | Age Pension recipients + others |
| Maximum loan | Based on age/property value | 150% of maximum Age Pension |
| Flexibility | Higher loan amounts available | Lower limits but far cheaper |
| Application | Via lender or broker | Via Services Australia |
Questions to Ask Before Proceeding
- Have I explored the government HEAS option first?
- How much will my loan balance be in 10, 15 and 20 years?
- How will this affect my ability to fund a RAD if I need aged care?
- Have I told my family and/or beneficiaries I'm considering this?
- Have I sought independent financial and legal advice?
This guide provides general information only. A reverse mortgage is a significant financial decision — always seek independent financial and legal advice before proceeding.
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