$30K First Home Owner Grant: Will Queensland Extend It in 2026 and Should You Wait to Find Out?

If you’re a first home buyer in Queensland, the next 60 days are the most important window you’ll have in years.

On 30 June 2026, the state’s headline-grabbing $30,000 First Home Owner Grant is scheduled to halve back to $15,000. The Crisafulli Government has made no announcement about extending it for a second time. The 2026–27 State Budget – typically handed down in late June will land within days of the cliff. And the property market isn’t waiting for politicians to make up their minds.

So here’s what this post does: it lays out five realistic scenarios for what happens after 30 June 2026, the predictions backing each one, and why waiting for the Treasurer’s announcement could cost you more than the grant itself.

First, a Quick Recap: What's the $30K Grant?

The Queensland First Home Owner Grant (FHOG) is a one-off cash payment to eligible first home buyers building or buying a brand-new home. It was temporarily doubled from $15,000 to $30,000 in November 2023, then extended by Treasurer David Janetzki in the June 2025 State Budget through to 30 June 2026.

The headline rules

  • Grant: $30,000 (reverts to $15,000 from 1 July 2026)
  • Eligible contracts: signed between 20 November 2023 and 30 June 2026
  • Property cap: total value of home + land must be less than $750,000
  • Property type: brand-new only – houses, townhouses, units, duplexes, modular homes and granny flats
  • Buyer: Australian citizen or permanent resident, first home, owner-occupier

And critically – it can be stacked with Queensland’s stamp duty exemption on new builds, the federal 5% Deposit Scheme, and the Boost to Buy shared-equity scheme. The right combination can mean $50,000+ in support on a single purchase.

Queensland Budget 2026 - What Could Happen

Five Scenarios for the $30K First Home Owner Grant Boost

With the boost set to expire on 1 July 2026, here's how the major scenarios are shaping up - and how likely each one really is.

01

The grant is extended AND the cap is raised

What it looks like

$30K stays. The $750,000 property cap is lifted to $850K or even $1M - possibly with regional differentiation (e.g. $1M for SEQ metro, $750K elsewhere).

Why it could happen

The $750K cap is the most-criticised feature of the current scheme. Brisbane's median dwelling value is now over $1.1 million, the statewide median house price is $955,000, and the cap was set in November 2023 when prices were materially lower. The federal 5% Deposit Scheme already uses $1M caps in Brisbane, the Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast - and Boost to Buy uses a $1M cap. The FHOG is the outlier. REIQ, the HIA, Master Builders Queensland and the Property Council have all argued for a higher cap in their pre-budget submissions.

Likelihood - Most expected

Quietly, this is the outcome industry expects most. It's politically saleable ('we're making the scheme work better'), fiscally manageable, and addresses a real gap.

02

A clean extension - same grant, same cap

What it looks like

$30K rolled forward another 12 months with the $750K cap untouched.

Why it could happen

It's the path of least resistance. The Crisafulli Government has built its housing message around 'the great Australian dream' and slashing the headline number heading into the next election cycle would be off-brand. They've already extended it once.

Likelihood - Highly possible

Highly possible, but it's a continuation of a flawed scheme rather than a fix. Many buyers in Brisbane will still find that no new home in their suburb fits under $750K.

03

The grant is replaced - not extended

What it looks like

The $30K boost lapses on 1 July 2026, but the savings are redirected into an expanded Boost to Buy shared-equity scheme or a beefier deposit support measure.

Why it could happen

Economists at the Australia Institute, AHURI and SBS commentators have repeatedly argued cash grants inflate prices and primarily benefit existing owners. Boost to Buy already has $330 million committed for 2,000 buyers and goes up to $1M property values - the policy infrastructure for a pivot is already in place.

Likelihood - Plausible

Less politically punchy than 'we extended the grant' but it lets the government claim a fresh policy win.

04

A smaller grant - wider cap

What it looks like

$20K instead of $30K, but the cap rises to $850K-$1M.

Why it could happen

Treasury-friendly compromise. Wider eligibility, lower headline number, similar total cost. BDO and Grant Thornton have both flagged that the 2025-26 budget projected ongoing deficits - this is the kind of trade-off Treasury would push for.

Likelihood - A real possibility

A real possibility, particularly if the budget is tight.

05

It lapses - back to $15K, $750K cap

What it looks like

The boost ends. The grant returns to $15,000. No replacement, no expansion.

Why it could happen

The legislation already locks this in. The Treasurer has framed the boost as 'temporary'. Critics will argue the grant inflates prices and other levers (stamp duty exemption, Boost to Buy) are already doing the heavy lifting.

Likelihood - Less likely, but on the table

Less likely than an extension or replacement - but absolutely on the table. And the worst-case for any buyer who's been waiting.

Looking for Guidance? Our Service is Free Of Charge!

Here's the Catch: Even an Extension Probably Won't Make It Easier to Buy

This is the part most buyers miss. Even if the $30K grant gets extended exactly as it is, the conditions around it are likely to get harder,  for first home buyers in 2026. Here is why:

Reason 01

Prices keep climbing

Brisbane's median dwelling value has crossed $1.1 million in early 2026. The statewide median house price hit $955,000 in the December quarter, growing 13.7% year-on-year. Every month you wait, the gap between the $750K cap and what's actually available in your suburb widens.

Reason 02

New-build supply is tight

Builders are quoting longer lead times and higher prices on house-and-land packages. If a wave of buyers rushes to lock in contracts before 30 June, those builders will become even more selective and more expensive.

Reason 03

The cap is doing the damage, not the deadline

If you're shopping new builds in Brisbane, the Gold Coast or the Sunshine Coast, the $750K cap is already the binding constraint. Even a clean grant extension doesn't help if the home you want is $820K. Buying now under contract - even with a long settlement - locks in eligibility before prices push you over the cap.

Reason 04

Interest rates are no longer falling fast

The RBA's easing cycle has slowed. Borrowing capacity isn't expected to dramatically improve in 2026. The 'wait until rates drop' play has thinner returns than it did 12 months ago.

The bottom-line argument for acting now

If the grant is extended, you’ve lost nothing by buying now. You still get the $30K. If the grant is reformed, with the cap raised or the scheme replaced, you may have already locked in the most generous version of the policy. And if the grant lapses, you’ve saved $15,000 by signing before 30 June 2026. There is no scenario where waiting beats buying, provided your finance, build choice, and property all genuinely stack up.

What if My New Build Is Over $750,000?

Going over $750K doesn’t mean losing every concession. The FHOG has a hard cliff at $750K – there’s no partial grant – but the rest of the support stack keeps working:

  • Stamp duty exemption: Since 1 May 2025, eligible first home buyers pay $0 on new builds with no property value cap. A $900K new build saves over $24,000.
  • First home vacant land concession: Also uncapped since 1 May 2025.
  • Boost to Buy: Up to 30% government equity (25% for existing homes), $1M property cap, $225K household income cap.
  • Federal 5% Deposit Scheme: $1M caps in Brisbane, the Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast; $700K elsewhere in QLD.

A Brisbane buyer at $820K still walks away with stamp duty savings, possible Boost to Buy equity and federal deposit support – just not the $30K cash.

Frequently Asked Questions

Has the QLD $30,000 grant been extended past June 2026?

Not yet. The grant currently expires for contracts signed after 30 June 2026 and reverts to $15,000. Any extension is most likely to be announced in the 2026-27 State Budget in late June 2026.

Will the $750K property cap be raised?

It's not confirmed, but it's one of the most lobbied-for changes ahead of the 2026-27 budget. Industry bodies including REIQ, HIA and the Property Council have argued the cap is unrealistic given Brisbane's median dwelling value is now over $1.1 million. A lift to $850K-$1M, possibly with regional differentiation, is plausible but not guaranteed.

What happens if my contract is signed before 30 June 2026 but settlement is later?

Eligibility is based on the contract date, not settlement. As long as you sign a qualifying contract on or before 30 June 2026 and meet the rules, settlement can occur later.

Can I get the grant for an existing home?

No - only brand-new homes qualify, including off-the-plan, townhouses and house-and-land packages. REIQ has lobbied for it to extend to established homes, but that hasn't happened.

Can I combine the grant with stamp duty exemption and Boost to Buy?

Yes - they're designed to work together. A first home buyer building a new home in QLD under $750K can typically access the $30K grant, full stamp duty exemption and (if income-eligible) up to a 30% Boost to Buy equity contribution.

The Bottom Line

The $30,000 QLD First Home Owner Grant is a genuine, time-limited windfall  and one of the rare policies where the smartest move is exactly the same regardless of how the prediction lands. If the grant is extended, you’ve lost nothing. If it’s reformed, you’ve banked the original. If it lapses, you’ve saved $15,000 you’d otherwise have missed.