{"id":3218,"date":"2026-06-06T07:57:35","date_gmt":"2026-06-05T21:57:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/chipkie.com\/au\/?p=3218"},"modified":"2026-06-06T07:57:39","modified_gmt":"2026-06-05T21:57:39","slug":"cost-of-living-borrowing-from-family-2026-australia","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chipkie.com\/au\/blog\/2026\/06\/06\/cost-of-living-borrowing-from-family-2026-australia\/","title":{"rendered":"Cost of Living Borrowing From Family 2026: Risks & Tips"},"content":{"rendered":"
With grocery bills up, rents still climbing, and energy prices squeezing household budgets across the country, more Australians are turning to the people closest to them for financial help. The cost of living borrowing from family 2026<\/strong> trend has accelerated sharply \u2014 the latest ASIC MoneySmart<\/a> data suggests informal family lending now underpins billions of dollars in household financial support each year. But borrowing from mum, dad, siblings, or in-laws carries risks that most people don’t think about until it’s too late.<\/p>\n This guide breaks down the real dangers, the tax traps, and the practical steps that protect both the borrower and the lender when family money changes hands in 2026’s tough economic environment.<\/p>\n Australians are borrowing from family more than ever because real wages have barely kept pace with inflation, APRA’s tighter lending rules have locked many people out of traditional credit, and essential costs \u2014 energy, insurance, food, and childcare \u2014 have risen faster than headline CPI. Family loans fill the gap that banks won’t.<\/p>\n Several forces are converging right now:<\/p>\n The result? Families are lending amounts ranging from a few hundred dollars for an electricity bill to six-figure sums for property deposits \u2014 often with nothing more than a verbal promise to repay.<\/p>\n The biggest risks are relationship breakdown, unclear repayment terms, tax complications from the ATO, and damage to both parties’ future borrowing capacity. Without a written agreement, a family loan can become a family feud \u2014 and in 2026’s pressured environment, those disputes are escalating fast.<\/p>\n Let’s unpack the risks that catch people off guard:<\/p>\n Yes. When you apply for a home loan or personal loan, lenders assess your total existing liabilities \u2014 including informal family debts. If you disclose a family loan (and you’re legally obliged to), it reduces your borrowing power. If you don’t disclose it and the lender discovers it, your application may be declined for dishonesty.<\/p>\n This problem cuts both ways. If a parent has drawn down on their home equity to lend to a child, their own serviceability drops. We consistently see this mistake across the agreements our users create \u2014 the lender’s retirement planning suffers because they didn’t account for the impact on their own finances. Read more about how co-signing and family lending destroys borrowing capacity<\/a>.<\/p>\n If a family loan has no written terms, no interest, and no evidence of repayment, the ATO may reclassify it as a gift or income \u2014 triggering potential tax consequences. For loans involving family trusts or private companies, Division 7A can impose deemed dividends at the top marginal tax rate (currently 47% including Medicare levy).<\/p>\n Key ATO triggers to watch:<\/p>\n For a deeper dive into these obligations, see our guide to tax implications of lending between friends and family<\/a>.<\/p>\n Overwhelmingly, yes \u2014 when there’s no structure. Research consistently shows that financial disputes are among the top causes of family estrangement in Australia. The borrower feels guilt and resentment; the lender feels anxious and unappreciated. When repayment stalls \u2014 as it often does during a cost of living crunch \u2014 silence replaces conversation.<\/p>\n Common flashpoints include:<\/p>\n Our experience working with borrowers and lenders shows that a simple written agreement \u2014 even for small amounts \u2014 reduces disputes dramatically. It transforms an emotional favour into a structured arrangement that both parties can refer back to without awkwardness.<\/p>\n Structure a family loan with a clear written agreement that includes the loan amount, interest rate (even if 0%), repayment schedule, what happens on default, and signatures from both parties. Treat it like a business transaction wrapped in family goodwill \u2014 because legally, that’s exactly what it is.<\/p>\n Here’s a practical framework:<\/p>\nWhy is borrowing from family surging in 2026’s cost of living crisis?<\/h2>\n
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What are the biggest risks when you borrow from family during tough times?<\/h2>\n
Can a family loan wreck your future borrowing capacity?<\/h3>\n
What happens if the ATO treats your family loan as a gift?<\/h3>\n
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Does borrowing from family actually damage the relationship?<\/h3>\n
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How should you structure a family loan to protect everyone in 2026?<\/h2>\n