#6 Borrow More with Earn Baby Earn

01 December 2022
Peter Norris

Author: Peter Norris

Managing Director & Mortgage Adviser

STRATEGY 6 – EARN BABY EARN

Named after a line from the catchiest song of the 70s (“Burn, Baby Burn” from Disco Inferno) ... Earn Baby Earn is the strategy that focuses on increasing your income.

This allows you to borrow more.

THE PROBLEM IT SOLVES


It increases your income so you can borrow more, because you now have more disposable income to service the higher lending amount.

THE COMMITMENT
What do I need to use this strategy?
• You either need one of the partners in your household to increase the hours they work.
• Or you need to be able to negotiate for an increase in salary, a higher paid job, or to restructure your remuneration package.
• Or to develop a third income stream that the bank counts as provable income.

This strategy won’t work for everyone, but you should still consider whether it could apply.
It is often used by investors and has enormous potential.
You’d actually be surprised how often clients of ours have used this strategy and have ended up getting pay rises they didn’t think they would get. Even if the pay rise doesn’t result in more lending, it’s a great outcome!

EXACTLY HOW IT WORKS
If one of the income-earners in your household increased their income from $80,000 to $90,000, that $10k pay rise would allow you to borrow between $55,000-$100,000 more for an investment property.

There are five ways investors typically increase their incomes.
• If one partner has taken time off to raise children, they can decide to start working again. This takes them from a one income to a double income household.
• If one partner is currently working parttime, consider increasing their hours to generate more income when applying for a mortgage.
• One partner (or both) could have a conversation with their employer about increasing their pay. Applying for a mortgage can often act as the trigger to start these conversations. Like I said above, you’d be surprised how often this works.
• Another option is to seek out higher-income employment. Large leaps in income often happen when switching jobs. Probably more so now than usual given the economic environment.
• One option for those earning bonuses or commission is to negotiate a change in salary structure. – Since your commission and bonuses are variable, the bank will sometimes include as little as 50 per cent of this income when assessing your mortgage application. – Sometimes it is worth accepting less money overall for more of it to be guaranteed. If you can lower your commission and increase your base salary, you can sometimes borrow more.

STEPS REQUIRED
• Decide which of the above you can use. Then have a conversation with your employer about the pay you earn or the hours you work.
• Then, you need evidence that you can show the bank. This could be payslips, an amendment made to your employment agreement, or a letter from your employer.

This is the last of our six strategies to getting investment ready.

The goal for me is to show you that getting a “no” or a decline, doesn’t have to be long-term and that there are some simple, really effective strategies you can adopt to get in the best position to borrow money.

If you’re focused on your own goal to purchase investment property, or improve your financial freedom, then don’t let a decline slow you down.

Chat to your adviser and see where your shortfall is. Then adopt the strategy to solve that.

Peter Norris

Peter Norris

Managing Director & Mortgage Adviser

Hi, I'm Peter, managing director here at Catalyst. I have a passion for property and helping people get the money they need to invest in property. I've spent 10 years in the broker market dealing with property portfolios of all sizes and honed my skill working with investors to help achieve their financial goals. Outside of work, you'll find me with my family or on the football field.

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