Urgent warning for Australians: How everything is about to get more expensive tomorrow


Australian households are bracing for a financial firestorm as a tidal wave of bill hikes prepares to slam family budgets and overshadow last‑minute fuel tax relief.

From April 1, millions will be hit with soaring charges across health insurance, toll roads, electricity and mortgages, unleashing a fresh hip‑pocket pain that could drain thousands from already‑stretched families.

2GB host Ben Fordham on Tuesday accused Anthony Albanese of acting too slowly on fuel prices, despite his government’s decision to halve the fuel excise for three months from Wednesday.

Fordham said for a standard 65‑litre tank, the cut would save drivers about $19, with the halved excise expected to shave 26.3 cents-a-litre off petrol and diesel. 

‘For weeks, we’ve been calling for a cut to the fuel tax, and now the government has finally acted after rejecting the idea. Anthony Albanese has backflipped,’ he said. 

‘Anthony Albanese has only acted because a Newspoll delivered a truth bomb.  Aussies are holding the PM responsible for the fuel crisis, and it’s hurting his popularity.’

According to insurance broker Compare Club, the confluence of bill hikes will place immense pressure on already-stretched family finances. 

‘April 1 is shaping up to be one of the toughest single days for household budgets we’ve seen in years,’ Head of Research Kate Browne told the Daily Mail.

Australian households are bracing for a financial firestorm as a tidal wave of bill hikes prepares to slam family budgets and overshadow last¿minute fuel tax relief

Australian households are bracing for a financial firestorm as a tidal wave of bill hikes prepares to slam family budgets and overshadow last‑minute fuel tax relief

‘When you stack a rate rise, higher health premiums and the end of energy rebates on top of each other, you’re looking at more than $2,000 in additional annual costs landing at once, and that’s on top of everything Australians are already absorbing.’

Health insurance premiums will jump by an average of 4.4 per cent, a move announced last month by the Minister for Health Mark Butler and adding between $80 and $160-a-year for many households.

Motorists will also pay more to use major Sydney roads, with toll increases kicking in across key routes such as the M2, M5, Lane Cove Tunnel and M7.

Electricity bills are set to surge as the government’s $450 rebate expires, meaning the next round of power bills will be the first to arrive without any support.

For mortgage holders, the pain is already acute. The Reserve Bank’s cash rate now sits at 4.1 per cent, with banks passing the increases on in full. 

That’s added roughly $1,400 a year to the average mortgage, and borrowers are bracing for further rises.

The Reserve Bank does not meet in April, offering only a brief reprieve, but Westpac is forecasting rate hikes in May, June and August.

Even petrol, despite the temporary tax cut, is still rising overall, with households expected to spend around $60 more a month once underlying costs are factored in.

Motorists will also pay more to use major Sydney roads, with toll increases kicking in across key routes such as the M2, M5, Lane Cove Tunnel and M7

Motorists will also pay more to use major Sydney roads, with toll increases kicking in across key routes such as the M2, M5, Lane Cove Tunnel and M7

2GB host Ben Fordham on Tuesday accused Anthony Albanese of acting too slowly on fuel prices, despite his government's decision to halve the fuel excise for three months this week

2GB host Ben Fordham on Tuesday accused Anthony Albanese of acting too slowly on fuel prices, despite his government’s decision to halve the fuel excise for three months this week

While drivers may notice modest relief at the bowser, Fordham said a far bigger financial shock will begin on Wednesday.

‘Households are expected to pay around $60 more per month on petrol overall, and the flow on effects from higher fuel prices have spread like a virus, impacting food, groceries, cafes, restaurants, pubs, retail, transport, holidays, household items, construction, materials, you name it,’ Fordham said.

‘It’s under pressure, and the combined impact is more than $2,000-a-year in additional costs for the average household with a mortgage.’

Fordham said while the government is touting its fuel tax cut as relief, many Australians are unlikely to feel it. 

‘It’s landing in the middle of a much bigger cost-of-living squeeze. And that pressure isn’t going away. It’s building,’ he said. 

The financial strain is already evident across the nation, with the company’s March Financial Stress Index revealing more than a third (38 per cent) of Australians felt financially worse off than the previous year.

Alarmingly, approximately 43 per cent of the 1,000 Australians surveyed admitted relying on credit at least occasionally to cover everyday household bills. 



Source link

Trump administration sues Minnesota over trans athletes in girls sports as Pam Bondi slams ‘flawed policies’

Kylie Jenner, Timothée Chalamet Beach Vacation: Photos

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *