Australian property investment calculator
Model the deal after a suburb looks plausible. Test whether the purchase still makes sense once deposit, interest rate, vacancy, expenses, tax effects, and growth assumptions hit the same model.
Rent-aware first-pass model setups
Use a large metro suburb when you want to test a more common purchase price before adjusting rent, expenses, and loan assumptions.
Start from a higher-yield suburb with a rent-led preset so vacancy, expenses, and growth are less optimistic than a generic model.
Start from a suburb where rent is stretched against local income, then pressure-test vacancy, interest, expenses, and lower growth.
Use a more expensive suburb when you want to pressure-test deposit size, stamp duty, and repayments under bigger loan balances.
- Interest rate and deposit size usually dominate the outcome faster than long-run growth fantasies.
- Weekly rent should be treated as a live assumption, not a permanent truth.
- Annual expenses are where many back-of-envelope property models get unrealistically generous.
- Monthly cash flow tells you whether the hold is painful or self-supporting at current assumptions.
- Net yield is more useful than gross yield once annual expenses and vacancy are acknowledged.
- The 30-year projection is a sensitivity tool. Change growth and rent assumptions to see how fragile the story is.
The calculator is a decision model layered on top of suburb datasets. It is useful because it brings price, rent, duty, tax, and growth assumptions together, but the inputs are not equally fresh across states.
Price, rent, and trend inputs now cover NSW, VIC, QLD, SA, WA, and TAS with different grains and refresh cadences.
Repayments, cash flow, and 30-year projections are formula-driven. They become misleading when you treat rent, growth, or expenses as guaranteed.
The calculator is strongest when the suburb, purchase price, and rent anchor already look plausible from the suburb page or compare workflow.
Calculator workspace
Run the model
Analyse property investment returns with stamp duty, negative gearing, and a 30-year projection.
This model is still generic. Load a real suburb before using the output as a serious decision check.
No suburb price anchor loaded
No linked rent source; user input drives yield
Needs both a linked rent and a linked price anchor.
Calculator output does not include a growth-quality adjustment
The calculator is not anchored to a suburb yet, so every input is a generic assumption.
This model is still generic. Load a real suburb before using the output as a serious decision check.
No suburb price anchor loaded
No linked rent source; user input drives yield
Needs both a linked rent and a linked price anchor.
Calculator output does not include a growth-quality adjustment
The calculator is not anchored to a suburb yet, so every input is a generic assumption.
Four questions about the calculator.
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What does the Australian property calculator model?
The calculator models purchase price, stamp duty, loan repayments, rent, vacancy, expenses, tax effects, negative gearing, projected growth, cash flow, yield, and long-run holding outcomes.
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When should I use the calculator in the QuickProperty workflow?
Use the calculator after suburb browsing or compare has produced a realistic candidate. It is a final validation tool, not the first step for discovering suburbs.
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Can the calculator start from a real suburb?
Yes. Links from AU suburb and compare workflows can preload a suburb so the model starts from a plausible state, purchase price, and rent assumption where data exists.
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Does the calculator provide financial advice?
No. The calculator is a research model for scenario testing. It does not replace tax, lending, legal, valuation, or investment advice.