| LMI Breakdown | Value (AUD) |
|---|---|
| Base Premium (Lenders Estimate) | $0 |
| Estimated Stamp Duty on LMI | $0 |
| Total Estimate | $0 |
Lenders Mortgage Insurance (LMI) Estimator: For Deposits Under 20% (2026)
💡 Expert Tip (The Interest Snowball): Most banks allow you to “capitalize” your LMI, which means adding the insurance cost to your total loan amount instead of paying it upfront. While this helps you buy a home with less cash, remember that you will be paying interest on that LMI premium for the next 30 years! If your LMI is $20,000, it could end up costing you over $45,000 by the time you finish your mortgage. If you have the extra cash, paying LMI upfront is almost always the smarter long-term financial move.
In the Australian property market, a 20% deposit is considered the “Gold Standard.” However, with rising property prices, saving six figures is becoming impossible for many first-home buyers. If your deposit is less than 20% of the property value, banks consider the loan “high risk.” To protect themselves, they charge you Lenders Mortgage Insurance (LMI). Our LMI Estimator helps you calculate this one-off premium so you can factor it into your total buying budget.
What Exactly is LMI? (The Great Misconception)
The most important thing to understand about Lenders Mortgage Insurance is that it does not protect you. Despite you paying the premium, the insurance only protects the bank in case you default on your loan and the property is sold for less than what you owe. If the bank loses money after selling your home, the insurer pays the bank, and then the insurer may come after you to recover that loss. It is a cost of entry to the market, not a safety net for the borrower.
How LMI Costs are Calculated
LMI is not a flat fee. It is calculated using a complex matrix that considers two main variables:
- Loan-to-Value Ratio (LVR): This is the percentage of the property value you are borrowing. An 85% LVR (15% deposit) will have significantly lower LMI than a 95% LVR (5% deposit). The higher the LVR, the higher the risk, and the higher the premium.
- The Loan Amount: Borrowing $500,000 at 95% LVR is less risky for a bank than borrowing $1,500,000 at the same ratio. As the total loan amount increases, the LMI rate per dollar also increases.
- First Home Buyer Status: Some insurers offer slightly discounted rates for first-time buyers, though this varies between providers like Helia (formerly Genworth) and QBE.
*Disclaimer: Every lender uses their own specific LMI provider and internal tiering. The figures provided by this estimator are indicative averages. Final LMI costs will be provided by your lender during the formal approval process.*
How to Legally Avoid or Reduce LMI
LMI can be a massive waste of money if you can avoid it. Here are the three most common ways savvy Australians skip the LMI bill:
- The First Home Guarantee (FHBG): The Australian Government provides a guarantee for eligible first-home buyers, allowing them to buy with as little as a 5% deposit without paying any LMI. Places are limited each year, so check your eligibility early.
- Professional Waivers: Banks love “low-risk” professionals. If you are a Doctor, Dentist, Lawyer, or Accountant earning a high income, many lenders will waive LMI entirely, even if you only have a 10% deposit.
- Family Guarantees: If a family member (usually a parent) has equity in their own home, they can act as a “Guarantor” for a portion of your loan. This reduces your LVR to 80% on paper, completely removing the need for LMI.