Skip to main content
Back to Property

NT First Home Buyer Calculator

Calculate first home buyer benefits in the Northern Territory including $10,000 FHOG and stamp duty concessions for homes up to $650,000.

Updated 2025-26 FYReviewed 4 May 2026Built in AustraliaData stays on your deviceATO sourced data

Disclaimer

This calculator provides estimates for general information purposes only. Results should not be relied upon as professional financial, tax, or legal advice. Tax rates and thresholds are based on publicly available ATO data and may change. Always consult a qualified tax agent or financial adviser for advice specific to your circumstances.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the First Home Owner Grant (FHOG)?
The FHOG is a one-off payment to help first home buyers. Amounts vary by state: QLD and TAS offer $30,000, SA $15,000, NSW/VIC/WA/NT $10,000, and ACT $7,000. It generally applies to new homes only and has property value caps.
Do first home buyers get stamp duty exemption?
Most states offer stamp duty exemptions or concessions. For example, NSW exempts properties up to $800,000, VIC up to $600,000, and QLD up to $700,000. Above these thresholds, a reduced (concession) rate may apply up to a higher limit.
What is the First Home Super Saver Scheme (FHSSS)?
FHSSS lets you save for your first home inside super, taking advantage of the 15% concessional tax rate. Voluntary contributions up to $15,000/yr and $50,000 total can be withdrawn later for a first home deposit. Withdrawals are taxed at marginal rate minus 30% offset — usually much lower than your normal marginal rate. Average saver gets $5,000-$15,000 extra deposit compared to saving outside super.
What is the First Home Guarantee?
Federal government scheme letting eligible first home buyers purchase with just 5% deposit and no Lenders Mortgage Insurance (LMI). The government guarantees the bank against the 15% gap. Caps: income limits ($125k single / $200k couple combined), property price caps vary by location (e.g. $900k Sydney metro, $700k other capital cities, $600k regional). Saves $10k-$30k in LMI. Limited spots per financial year — apply early.
Should I buy new or established to maximise benefits?
Depends on state. NEW PROPERTY benefits: FHOG is usually $10k-$30k (NSW $10k, QLD $30k, TAS $30k, SA $15k for new only). ESTABLISHED PROPERTY benefits: usually stamp duty exemption/concession (NSW up to $800k, VIC up to $600k). Most established buyers get more total value via stamp duty savings ($15k-$35k) than the FHOG. Run both numbers with our state-specific calculators.

What is NT First Home Buyer?

First home buyer benefits in Australia include the First Home Owner Grant (FHOG), stamp duty exemptions, and the First Home Super Saver Scheme (FHSSS). Eligibility and amounts vary by state.

How this calculator works

This calculator checks your eligibility for first home buyer benefits in your chosen state. It looks up the FHOG amount (ranging from $7,000 in ACT to $30,000 in QLD and TAS), checks whether your property price qualifies for stamp duty exemption or concession, estimates Lenders Mortgage Insurance if your deposit is below 20%, and calculates your total savings compared to a standard buyer. The LVR (Loan-to-Value Ratio) indicator shows your risk level.

The First Home Owner Grant (FHOG)

Cash grant from state government, usually for NEW homes only (new builds, off-the-plan, substantially renovated). Amounts 2025-26: QLD $30,000, TAS $30,000, SA $15,000, NSW $10,000, VIC $10,000, WA $10,000, NT $10,000, ACT $7,000. Property value caps apply (e.g. NSW $750k new build cap). The grant is paid at settlement or shortly after — used to reduce mortgage rather than received as cash.

Stamp Duty Concessions

Usually applies to ESTABLISHED homes (not just new). Saves more money than FHOG for most buyers. NSW: full exemption up to $800k, concession to $1M. VIC: exemption to $600k, concession to $750k. QLD: concession to $700k. WA: exemption to $430k. ACT: full exemption to $1M (most generous). On a $750k home in NSW, the saving is ~$28k — bigger than any state's FHOG. Don't just chase the cash grant; compare total savings.

First Home Super Saver Scheme (FHSSS)

Save your deposit INSIDE super at the 15% concessional tax rate, then withdraw up to $50,000 (plus deemed earnings) for your first home. Contributions are limited to $15,000/yr. Withdrawals are taxed at your marginal rate MINUS a 30% offset — effectively much lower than your normal tax rate. Average benefit: $5,000-$15,000 of extra deposit compared to saving outside super. Apply via ATO at least 6 months before purchase.

First Home Guarantee (Federal)

Federal government guarantees up to 15% of your purchase price, letting you buy with just 5% deposit WITHOUT Lenders Mortgage Insurance. Saves $10k-$30k in LMI typically. Income caps: $125k single / $200k couple. Property price caps by location (Sydney metro $900k, other capitals $700k, regional $600k). Limited 35,000 spots per financial year — apply early, especially before EOFY when allocations refresh.

Total Maximum First Home Buyer Savings

Stacking schemes a first home buyer in NSW could receive: $10,000 FHOG (if new build) + $28,000 stamp duty saving (under $800k) + $10,000 LMI saving (via First Home Guarantee) + $5,000-$10,000 FHSSS benefit = total $50k-$60k of government support. Worth taking time to set up properly — eligibility checks, applications, and FHSSS deposits often need 6+ months lead time.

Pitfalls and Genuine Savings Requirements

(1) 'Genuine savings' — most banks require 3-5% of purchase price saved over 3-6 months, not gifts or grants. (2) 'First home' definition — you must NEVER have owned property in Australia (including overseas property doesn't disqualify in most states). (3) Owner-occupation — most schemes require you live in the home for 6-12 months after settlement. (4) Tax debt or HECS-HELP arrears can disqualify you from FHSSS withdrawals.

Updated for the 2025-26 financial year (1 July 2025 to 30 June 2026).

All calculations are performed in your browser — your data never leaves your device. Results are for general guidance only and should not be considered professional financial advice.

Built and maintained by Konstantin Iakovlev. Data sourced from the ATO and official Australian government sources.