For Sarah Chen, a 28-year-old teacher in Strathfield, the shared equity scheme felt like finally getting a real shot at homeownership. "I'd saved $150,000, but that wasn't going to get me across the line in Inner West Sydney," she says. Last year, she purchased a two-bedroom apartment in Dulwich Hill using the state government's shared equity scheme—and it changed her trajectory.
The shared equity scheme is fundamentally simple: the NSW government takes a stake in your property (typically 25 or 35 per cent), meaning you only need to finance and own the remaining portion. For buyers struggling with deposit gaps in premium markets like the Northern Beaches or around Coogee, it's a legitimate pathway to enter the market without waiting another decade.
Here's how it works in practice. First, you're eligible if you're a first-time buyer earning under $120,000 annually (or $180,000 jointly) and purchasing in NSW. You'll need to save a minimum 5 per cent deposit—roughly $40,000 on a median-priced Sydney property. The government then contributes its equity stake without charging interest or requiring repayment until you sell or refinance.
Second, you secure a mortgage for the remainder. Because the government's stake reduces your loan-to-value ratio, lenders view you as lower risk, often translating to better interest rates. Your regular mortgage repayments only cover your portion of the property.
Third—and crucially—when you eventually sell, the government's returns are proportional to the property's growth. If you purchase a Marrickville terrace for $800,000 and sell for $950,000 five years later, the government's 25 per cent stake grows proportionally. This isn't a grant; it's structured like genuine partnership.
The scheme targets inner-ring supply constraints deliberately. While it works across NSW, Sydney buyers in tight markets—Balmain, Newtown, Clovelly—benefit most. You won't qualify for outer suburbs where affordability is already accessible, nor can you use it to upgrade; it's strictly first-home territory.
Applications flow through Housing NSW. Documentation includes proof of income, savings history, and a formal purchase contract. Processing typically takes 4-6 weeks, meaning it's timing-sensitive in competitive auctions.
The trade-off? You'll never own 100 per cent of the property during the scheme's life. Refinancing costs are higher. And future buyers of that property must understand the encumbered title.
Yet for buyers aged 25-40 priced out of Sydney's median zones, it's reshaping what "first home" actually means—not a distant dream, but an achievable milestone.
This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.