I get asked this a lot, usually by buyers who are trying to work out whether to stretch their budget. [cite: 182] The honest answer is: the $150k difference buys you more suburb as much as it buys you more house. [cite: 183]
The House Difference
- An extra bedroom is usually achievable — moving from 3 to 4 bedrooms [cite: 186]
- Lot size typically increases from around 280sqm to 350 to 420sqm [cite: 187]
- Better inclusions — stone benchtops, quality appliances, upgraded floor coverings [cite: 188]
- Potentially double storey, which adds living space without requiring more land [cite: 189]
- More builder choice — the $750k bracket opens up more reputable volume builders [cite: 190]
The Suburb Difference
This is the more significant shift. [cite: 192] At $600k in the south east you’re looking at Pakenham East, Officer South and outer growth areas. [cite: 192] At $750k, Cranbourne, Berwick and inner Officer come into range. [cite: 193] That means existing schools, established retail and a more mature community around you from day one. [cite: 194]
Is the Stretch Worth It?
That depends entirely on your situation. [cite: 195] If you’re a first home buyer with a tight deposit, $600k gives you access to the stamp duty exemption and keeps your borrowings lower. [cite: 196] If you can comfortably service the extra $150k, the suburb quality at $750k is meaningfully better. [cite: 197]
Talk to KR Peters. We can walk you through both scenarios with real examples. [cite: 199] We’re not going to push you into a bigger commitment — we’re going to help you make the right decision for your situation. [cite: 200]
References: 1. Xircon Homes. [cite: 202] 2. Australian Property Experts. [cite: 203] 3. AusTax Tools. [cite: 204]