Two Red Shoes principal and mortgage broker Rebecca Jarrett-Dalton said all her clients have been affected to varying extents, depending on the amount they want to borrow and their reported costs.

“It only affects you if you’re borrowing the maximum and your expenditure figures are beneath the measure,” Jarrett-Dalton said.

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This can often be someone who is eager to get into the market, such as first-home buyers, but can also include upgraders and low-income earners.

“The more dramatic shifts have been in the last couple of months, and it’s just a reflection of inflation,” she said, adding that most people report below the measure when many, in fact, spend more.

In one case, a single applicant on $70,000 a year lost $20,000 in borrowing capacity after the measure was revised up.

“She will be able to buy something, but the type of property has had to change. She was looking for a two-bedroom unit before, now she has to look for one [bedroom]. It’s not pretty.”

Mortgage Choice Dee Why principal James Algar said the measure, which reflected the rise in the cost of living, was compounding the pain of rising rates, especially for families.

“The [House Expenditure Measure] has changed more significantly for families than any other household, especially when someone is part-time,” Algar said.

One family lost $100,000 in borrowing capacity on a $2.6 million loan application when the measure changed in the past quarter.

“So it’s about as much as a 3 per cent [reduction] in that case. When they’ve lost 20 per cent of their borrowing just on interest rate changes, another 3 per cent, it all counts.

“Ultimately, that flows through, they have less spending power. They’re not alone, anyone in a similar situation is experiencing the same.”

40Forty director and mortgage broker Will Unkles said rising prices on essential goods and services meant buyers had even less borrowing power when looking to buy property as a result.

“The effect of [House Expenditure Measure] changes would have been no more than 5 per cent. But that coupled with already reduced borrowing capacity from interest rates, that points to less money in the pocket of buyers,” Unkles said, adding that it affected about 30 per cent of his home loan applicant clients.

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