First home buyers have choices; but they deem distant western Sydney option unpalatable
Its never been easy. Every generation of first home buyers has faced affordability obstacles and choices, but the noisiest of the latest batch of first home buyers would prefer to bleat rather than make the latterday sacrifices that were undertaken, in an earlier form, by their parents.
I accept that the 2013 buying prospects are diminished, but the buying priorities and requirements appear almost non-negotiable by this so-called, doomed to rent for life generation.
At weekend auction, when the APM median house sale price was a likely record $1.065 million, I spotted at least 25 offerings sold at below $500,000, with opportunities for instance to buy a unit in Meadowbank, Cronulla, Parramatta, Summer Hill, Burwood, Five Dock, Croydon Park, even Bronte.
There were houses in Granville, Casula, Parramatta, Blackett and Fairfield West.
The weekend's cheapest sale was $191,000 for a four bedroom 1960s house on 1500 square metres in the Blue Mountains. The Bullaburra property, which sold to an investor, had last sold at $240,000 in 2007. The suburb's median house price is $377,000.
Sydney currently has 51 suburbs with median house prices below $400,000 including:
Tregear $240,000
Bidwill $250,000
Blackett $251,000
Emerton $252,000
Lethbridge Park $255,000
There are 122 Sydney suburbs with house medians below $500,000.
For units, it has 45 suburbs with median unit prices below $400,000.
There are some 98 suburbs with below $500,000 unit median prices.
That's out of the 650 Sydney suburbs.
Some of these options are located in the upper north shore, the inner west and the city and east, including Hornsby $450,000 units, Forest Lodge $456,000 units, Newtown $466,000 units, Ultimo $490,000 units and Eastlakes $410,000 units.
Yes APM has previously acknowledged the average distance from the city centre for the Sydney suburbs below $400,000 was 52 kilometres.
That's compared with 36 kilometres in Melbourne and 30 kilometres in Brisbane, APM noted.
But as Andrew Wilson, the senior economist at Australian Property Monitors recently noted, Sydney has a lower end housing market that is "as accessible, if not more accessible, than most other capital city markets."
With the Sydney median house price now exceding $700,000, it is the option for first buyers to look where they can buy new houses for less than $400,000 and existing stock for over $240,000.
Sydney, with its high median because the middle market is so strong, does has the buying prospects. They just have to be viewed as worthy, transitory, not unpalatable.