What Is Mortgage Stress? Understanding the 30% Rule

Mortgage stress is the term used when a household's mortgage repayments become a disproportionately large share of their income β€” squeezing out money for essentials like food, utilities, transport, and healthcare. It's not just a financial metric; for the 1.3 million Australians currently affected, it's a daily reality of difficult trade-offs.

The 30% Threshold

The most widely used benchmark is the "30% rule" β€” a household is considered to be under mortgage stress when mortgage repayments exceed 30% of gross (pre-tax) household income. This isn't a hard scientific line, but it's the standard used by most industry commentators, media, and housing affordability researchers.

Roy Morgan, Australia's leading independent research company for mortgage stress data, uses a more sophisticated methodology that adjusts the threshold based on income level, household size, and essential spending patterns. Under their framework, lower-income households can enter stress at below 30%, while higher-income households may tolerate higher ratios due to larger discretionary spending buffers.

The 2026 Picture: Back-to-Back Rate Hikes

After three rate cuts in 2025 briefly eased pressure, the RBA reversed course with consecutive hikes in February (to 3.85%) and March (to 4.10%) 2026, driven by resurgent inflation linked to Middle East energy price shocks and persistent wage growth.

The latest Roy Morgan data paints a stark picture:

Who's Most Affected?

Mortgage stress doesn't hit evenly. The most vulnerable groups include:

Mortgage Stress by State

Stress rates vary significantly across Australia:

StateStress RateAvg MortgageMedian Income
TAS 29.5% $420,000 $73,000
VIC 29.1% $628,000 $89,000
QLD 28.3% $545,000 $85,000
SA 27.8% $445,000 $79,000
NT 26.2% $390,000 $88,000
NSW 25.8% $752,000 $98,000
WA 25.5% $480,000 $102,000
ACT 21.4% $590,000 $115,000

For detailed state-specific information including local counselling services and government programs, see our state-by-state breakdown.

What Can You Do About It?

If you're in or approaching mortgage stress, there are concrete steps you can take β€” and the earlier you act, the more options you have:

  1. Test your position: Use our Mortgage Stress Calculator to see exactly where you stand against the 30% threshold.
  2. Call your lender: Request a rate review. If that's not enough, ask about hardship provisions.
  3. Explore refinancing: Our break-even calculator shows whether switching lenders makes financial sense.
  4. Get free professional advice: The National Debt Helpline (1800 007 007) provides free, confidential financial counselling.
  5. Check government support: State and federal government programs may be available for utility relief, hardship grants, or shared equity schemes.

Free, confidential financial counselling:

1800 007 007

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