Wages went up 2.1× in 25 years. Sydney house prices went up 5.7×. Groceries up 26%. Petrol up 54%. Mortgages doubled. Super won't save you. This is how the default path turned into a trap — and the one move that gets you out.
In 2000 the average Sydney house cost ~$300,000. Today it's $1.7M. In the same window the average Sydney full-time wage went from $45k to $98k. Housing outpaced wages by 2.6× — and the gap is still widening.
The median multiple — Sydney median house price ÷ the average full-time wage, year by year. Demographia's global affordability standard caps "affordable" at 3× and flags anything above 5.1× as "severely unaffordable". Sydney was already there in 1980. We're now at 17× — and still climbing.
Between May 2022 and November 2023 the RBA went from 0.10% to 4.35% — the fastest tightening cycle in three decades. Landlords passed the cost on. Sydney rents jumped 42% in three years. There was no escape.
Most Sydney first-home buyers can borrow up to ~$1M. The median house costs $1.7M. Every step below the median, the product gets worse — older, smaller, further out, or it's a unit instead of a house.
Walk-up block. Body corp $5k/yr. No land. Capital growth flatlined for a decade. You pay $20k/yr in interest to live in a shoebox.
Inferior product · UnitStrata-titled, attached, ~120sqm of floor on shared land. Older build = bigger maintenance bills. You own walls, not dirt — and dirt is what compounds.
Compromised · Townhouse3-bed weatherboard or red brick, asbestos potential, dated kitchen, 700m² block. 90-minute commute. You bought a house but bought back 3 hours of your life every day.
Old + Far · Declining conditionMost Sydney buyers don't read the amortisation page. Here's the truth on a Sydney-median purchase — 20% deposit, $1.36M loan, 6.29% over 30 years. You'll repay nearly $3M for a house that cost $1.7M today. $1.67M of that is interest. Gone to the bank.
School → uni → debt → a job to pay off the debt → save a deposit → buy a house → 30 years paying it off. For our parents it worked. They bought at 27, paid it off by 50, retired comfortable. Today's average first-home buyer is 38. By the time you finish the mortgage you're 68.
This is the route the school system, your parents, and the banks line you up for. It only works if everything compounds in your favour. It hasn't, since about 2010.
Get told uni is the path. Sign up for a HECS debt without understanding it.
HECS indexed annually (peaked 7% in 2023). Wage growth doesn't outpace it. The debt grows while you pay it.
16 years of working to save the $340k deposit. Bought a townhouse or older house outer-ring.
Paid back $3M for it. You're 68. Super balance ~$290k. Worth more, but you live in it. You can't eat your house.
Super ran out. Aged pension is $30k. You sell the house, move regional, watch wealth drain to fund living.
ASFA says a "comfortable" retirement requires $52,805/yr for a single, $74,401 for a couple. The average Australian retires with $292k (men) / $215k (women) in super. Drawn down at the comfortable level, super lasts 5–6 years. Then the aged pension at $30k/year — below the poverty line.
The first is everyone you know. The second is the ~6% of Australians who own an investment property and are quietly building real wealth in the background.
Same person. Same starting position. Different choices. 35-year-old earning $120k, $50k savings, paying Sydney rent unless they own. Renter = keeps renting, super only. Owner = buys $1M established Sydney house at 4.5% growth + $7k/yr maintenance, 90% LVR + LMI. Investor 1 = rentvests, buys one $750k wholesale at 6.6% p.a. (Lara corridor long-run CAGR via Cotality), tenant covers most of the loan. Investor 2 = adds a second wholesale at year 3 via equity refinance.
This isn't a financial fairytale. This is what compounding does when it works for you instead of against you. Below — a single $750k wholesale property over 10, 20 and 30 years at 6.6% p.a., the Lara corridor's long-run compounding rate (Cotality) — deliberately well below the suburb's recent 12-month print.
$750,000 Lara wholesale package today. 6.6% per annum compound growth — the corridor's long-run rate. Interest-only for 5 years, then 25yr P&I — tenant pays it down. Refinance at year 7 to draw equity for property #2.
Compounding is time-dependent — the earliest years of a long hold do the most work. And wholesale allocations are stage-released: each corridor carries a finite number of pre-retail entries before it matures to retail pricing.
30 minutes. No fee. No pressure. Bring your salary, your borrowing capacity, your savings — we'll show you the exact wholesale property that fits, what it does over 10/20/30 years, and what your tax position looks like in year one.