The “5% Deposit” Myth

If you are a medical professional entering the property market, you have likely structured your financial plan around one key number: 5%.

Because of your profession’s stability, you are likely eligible for an LMI waiver, allowing you to borrow up to 95% of a property’s value without paying Lenders Mortgage Insurance. For a $1,000,000 home, the math seems simple: Save $50,000, get the loan, move in.

This calculation is misleading.

While the bank only requires a 5% contribution towards the asset, they generally do not lend money for the transactional costs. The real doctor home loan deposit you need in your bank account to cover upfront costs is often much more than what you expect.

This guide provides a comprehensive, chronological breakdown of the upfront costs of buying a home, helping you calculate exactly how much liquidity you need to avoid a funding gap at settlement.

ESTIMATE BASED ON ~$1,050,000 PURCHASE PRICE (NSW)
Cost Item Est. Amount Due Date Add to Loan?
Search Costs
Legal reviews & reports
$2,000 Weeks 1-4 No (Sunk Cost)
The 5% Deposit
Equity contribution
$52,500 Day 0 (Exchange) No (Cash)
Stamp Duty (NSW)
Based on $1.05M
$42,240 Day 30 No (Tax)
Adjustments
Rates reimbursement
$1,500 Day 42 (Settle) No
Govt. Registration
Transfer & Mortgage
$352 Day 42 (Settle) Partial
PEXA Fee
Settlement Workspace
$140 Day 42 (Settle) Partial
TOTAL CASH REQUIRED ~$98,732 Approx. 10% of Purchase Price

Phase 1: The Search Cycle

Before you pay your deposit, you will bleed cash. These are “sunk costs” – money paid to third parties to validate the property.

1. Contract Reviews (Solicitor)

  • The Cost: $300 – $400 per contract.
  • Why pay this? You aren’t just paying someone to read; you are paying for risk mitigation. A solicitor checks for:
    • Easements: Is there a sewer main running under the backyard that prevents you from ever building a pool or extension?
    • Caveats: Does an ex-spouse or creditor have a claim on the land that could stall settlement?
    • Special Conditions: Is the vendor trying to pass on land tax or penalty interest to you?
  • The Strategy: Ask your solicitor for a “Medical Pack” or a flat fee that covers unlimited reviews for 3 months.

2. Pest, Building & Strata Reports

Just as you wouldn’t operate without imaging, you shouldn’t buy without a report.

  • The Cost: $400 – $600 per report.
  • What to look for (The Deal Breakers):
    • House (Pest & Building): Look for active termites (not just old damage), damp course failure (rising damp), and structural subsidence (cracking brickwork). The report usually informs you what structures need further professional assessment, and replacement, which both entail additional costs.
    • Apartment (Strata Report): This is arguably more important. You are checking the “Sinking Fund” (Capital Works Fund).
      • Red Flag: If the fund is low ($10k) but the building is old, you will likely get hit with a “Special Levy” (an unexpected bill for $20k-$50k) to replace the roof or windows soon after you move in.
      • Red Flag: Look for “Concrete Cancer” or “Cladding” issues in the meeting minutes.

Warning: It is common to bid on 3 properties before success. Budget $2,000 in “Search Cash” that cannot be added to your loan.


Phase 2: Exchange of Contracts (The Commitment)

3. The 10% Contract Dilemma

Here is a common panic moment for doctors.

  • The Problem: The Bank says you only need a 5% deposit. But the Real Estate Agent’s contract says you must pay 10% to exchange.
  • The Solution: You have two options to bridge this gap:
    1. Negotiate: Have your solicitor add a “5% Deposit Clause” to the contract before you sign. Most vendors will accept 5% cash if they know you are a pre-approved doctor.
    2. Deposit Bond: If the vendor demands 10% and you don’t have the cash, you can buy a Deposit Bond (an insurance policy that guarantees the deposit). It costs ~1.3% of the deposit amount.

4. The Insurance Gap

  • The Cost: $1,500 – $3,000 per year.
  • Factors Influencing Premium:
    • Location: Flood zones or bushfire prone areas (BAL ratings) will significantly increase your premium.
    • Building Type: Heritage homes cost more to insure due to rebuilding complexity.
    • Claim History: If previous owners made multiple claims, your premium may be higher.

Phase 3: The Settlement Period (Government Taxes)

Timing: Weeks 1–6 (Waiting for completion)

Stamp duty (officially known as Transfer Duty in most states) is a tax levied by state and territory governments on specific documents and transactions – most notably, the purchase of property (houses, land, and investment properties).

In simple terms: It is the “fee” the government charges to transfer the legal ownership of the property from the seller to you

This is the largest upfront cost and the one most buyers fail to budget for.

5. When do I pay Stamp Duty?

  • NSW: Must be paid on or before settlement (or within 3 months of exchange, whichever comes first).
  • VIC/QLD: Generally payable at settlement or within 30 days of settlement.
  • The Liquidity Trap: You generally cannot add Stamp Duty to your loan. You must have this cash ready in your account ~2 weeks before settlement so your solicitor can transfer it to the State Revenue office.

Can I avoid Stamp Duty?

  • Investment Property: You pay full stamp duty on all investment purchases in all states.
  • First Home Buyer (PPOR Only):
    • NSW: If you are buying your first home to live in (PPOR), you pay $0 Stamp Duty for homes under $800,000. You get a discount for homes between $800k–$1m.
    • VIC: Exemption for homes under $600k; concession up to $750k.
    • QLD: Exemption for homes under $700k (as of recent updates).

Stamp Duty Estimator (2025)

ESTIMATED STAMP DUTY
$0
Enter a property value to see the calculation breakdown.
*Figures are estimates for Standard Transfer Duty (Owner Occupier/Investment). Does not include First Home Buyer exemptions or Foreign Buyer Surcharges. Always confirm with your solicitor or the State Revenue Office.

Phase 4: Settlement Day (Day 42)

Timing: The day you get the keys

Your solicitor will calculate the "Funds to Complete." This is the final discrepancy between your loan amount and the total payout figure.

6. Settlement Adjustments

You don't just pay for the house; you reimburse the owner for their prepayments.

  • Council & Water Rates: If the vendor paid rates until June and you buy in January, you must pay them back for Feb–June. (~$500–$2,000).
  • Strata Levies: If the quarterly levy was just paid, you reimburse the remaining weeks.

7. Bank Fees & Loan Packages

  • Annual Package Fee (~$395): Most "Medical Professional" loans are packaged loans. This fee covers your 100% Offset Account, credit card annual fees, and valuation fees. It is usually charged annually on the anniversary of the settlement. Some banks are moving away from this to a monthly service fee model.
  • Settlement Fee (~$200): A one-off admin fee for the bank to disburse funds.

8. Government Registration Fees (Added as requested)

These are mandatory fees charged by the Land Registry Services (LRS) to update the title.

  • Transfer Registration (~$175.70 in NSW): The fee to legally change the name on the title deed from the Vendor to You.
  • Mortgage Registration (~$175.70 in NSW): The fee to register the bank's interest on your title.
  • PEXA Fee (~$140): The fee for the electronic settlement workspace.

Phase 5: Post-Settlement (Ongoing Costs)

Timing: Annually thereafter

Many doctors get blindsided by this bill a year after buying.

9. What is Land Tax?

It is an annual tax on the value of the land (not the house) you own.

  • PPOR Exemption: You generally do not pay land tax on your principal home (where you live).
  • Investment Only: It applies to investment properties and holiday homes.

When do I pay it? (NSW Example)

  • Threshold (2025): You only pay if the total land value of your investments exceeds $1,075,000. You pay $100 + 1.6% of the value above the threshold.
  • Billing Cycle: It is calculated based on what you own at midnight on 31 December. The bill usually arrives in Feb/March.
  • Settlement Adjustment: If you buy an investment property that already has a land tax charge on it, you may have to pay a portion of the vendor's land tax bill at settlement. Always check the contract for "Land Tax Adjustable: YES/NO".

Do you have enough savings to purchase a property?

Use our Doctor-Specific Calculator to factor in all upfront costs of buying your first property

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