Buying with a stranger?!

Home Buying with a stranger?!

Co-ownership isn’t a leap. It’s a process.

Let’s be honest.
For most people, the first reaction to co-owning property is:


“There’s no way I’d buy a place with someone I don’t know.”

That hesitation makes sense. Co-ownership isn’t risk-free — but neither is buying property on your own.


What matters is how much time, structure and clarity sit around the decision.

Property isn’t an impulse purchase.
It’s a step-by-step process, with built-in pauses, documentation and independent checks designed to slow things down.

Whether co-ownership feels right for you is something only you can decide.

So let’s take a moment…
and walk through what a typical process can look like.

Property purchases don’t happen on a whim

Unlike your morning coffee, buying a property requires time, documentation and independent assessment and professional advice — long before contracts are signed and things a committed.  Typically a co-ownership will include a co-ownership agreement which is negotiated and reviewed by each prospective co-owners lawyers. 

If finance is involved, lenders are legally required to assess each person’s ability to repay a loan before approving it.

They do this independently, because they have their own obligations and exposure.

That means co-ownership doesn’t bypass scrutiny — it adds more of it.

Why structure matters – and why scepticism helps

Traditionally, co-ownership has happened between family or friends — where trust replaces structure.

Ironically, that’s often where risk increases.

When people rely on relationships alone, they may skip formal agreements, avoid difficult conversations, or fail to plan for change.

Approaching co-ownership with caution — even pessimism — is actually an advantage.

It puts you in a better position to ask questions, think ahead and put safeguards in place.

Co-ownership is designed — not assumed

Well-structured co-ownership arrangements typically consider things like:

  • How ownership is held
  • How decisions are made
  • What happens if circumstances change
  • How costs, use and responsibilities are managed
  • How an eventual exit might work (exit strategy)

If lending is involved, each party is assessed individually.

And repayment responsibilities can be structured so they’re clearly defined — rather than assumed.

Nothing is left to “we’ll figure it out later”.

Planning for change isn’t pessimistic — it’s practical

Life changes.
People travel.
Jobs shift.
Relationships evolve.

Good co-ownership planning considers this from the outset.

For example:

  • If one person moves out, is renting an option?
  • If both move on, could the property be leased?
  • If one person wants to exit, what process applies?

Having these conversations early doesn’t create problems —
it reduces uncertainty.

Clear exit paths create confidence

Co-ownership arrangements often include agreed pathways for the future — whether that’s selling, buying each other out, or reassessing after a set period of time.

In many ways, this level of clarity is more predictable than other long-term commitments in life.

The goal isn’t certainty.
It’s transparency.

Important information
The content on this page is provided for general information only and does not constitute financial, legal or investment advice. Letterbox does not provide personalised recommendations or advice. You should consider your own circumstances and seek independent professional advice before making any property or financial decisions.

Letterbox AU 2026