Mortgage Stress by State β€” How Australia Compares

Mortgage stress varies significantly across Australia, driven by differences in property prices, household incomes, employment patterns, and local economic conditions. Here's the state-by-state picture as of March 2026.

National Overview

Following the RBA's back-to-back rate hikes to 4.10%, approximately 1.319 million Australian mortgage holders (26.6%) are at risk of mortgage stress. Victoria and Tasmania lead the nation in stress rates, while the ACT and WA have the lowest β€” largely due to higher household incomes.

StateStress RateAvg MortgageMedian IncomeKey Driver
TAS 29.5% $420,000 $73,000 Lowest incomes nationally
VIC 29.1% $628,000 $89,000 Construction slowdown, outer suburb overextension
QLD 28.3% $545,000 $85,000 Pandemic migration boom, fixed-rate cliff
SA 27.8% $445,000 $79,000 Lower incomes, Adelaide price growth
NT 26.2% $390,000 $88,000 High cost of living, small market
NSW 25.8% $752,000 $98,000 Large loans offset by high incomes
WA 25.5% $480,000 $102,000 Mining incomes buffer rate rises
ACT 21.4% $590,000 $115,000 Highest incomes, public sector stability

What Drives State-Level Differences?

The single biggest factor in mortgage stress isn't property prices β€” it's the ratio of mortgage repayments to household income. This is why Tasmania (lowest average mortgages) has higher stress than NSW (highest average mortgages): Tasmanian incomes are significantly lower.

Employment mix matters too. States with large public sector workforces (ACT) or mining sectors (WA) have more stable, higher incomes that buffer against rate rises. States with larger hospitality, retail, and gig economy workforces see stress earlier.

State-Specific Guides

For detailed information including local financial counselling services and state government programs:

New South Wales
25.8% at risk
Victoria
29.1% at risk
Queensland
28.3% at risk
Western Australia
25.5% at risk
South Australia
27.8% at risk
Tasmania
29.5% at risk
Australian Capital Territory
21.4% at risk
Northern Territory
26.2% at risk

Free financial counselling β€” available nationwide:

1800 007 007

National Debt Helpline Β· Mon–Fri 9:30am–4:30pm