Aussie leaves Sydney for rural financial gap year in Queensland to reach $100,000 property dream: 'Golden ticket'

Tim in a suit and in his tradie gear
Tim traded his desk job for a physically demanding role in rural Queensland and has been blown away by how much money he's been able to save. (Source: Supplied)

Australians are heading to regional areas in their droves to escape cost-of-living crunches that can be far worse in metropolitan cities. Tim Abbott is part of this huge shift, and he decided to move from Sydney to rural Queensland last month.

The 31-year-old is hoping to save $100,000 in the next 12 months, in what he's calling his financial gap year. He told Yahoo Finance he will hopefully be able to buy a freestanding house with the money saved.

"I just want to fast-track to the next step, and this was my golden ticket to do so," he said.

Struggling to save in a place like Sydney

Abbott had been in digital marketing for close to a decade and was paying $600 per week in rent for a shared apartment in Sydney's Eastern Suburbs, which had doubled in price since 2021.

He, like many people his age, was looking at the property market and was worried whether he would ever be able to save enough money to buy a house.

The 31-year-old had already bought a one-bedroom apartment, but the strata expenses and renovations were costing him thousands of dollars he didn't really have.

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Add on the high cost of living in Sydney, Abbott found it very difficult to save up enough money for his homeownership dream, even after reducing his spending.

"I wasn't going out partying. I didn't have any subscription services. I drove a very humble 2014 Mazda," he told Yahoo Finance.

"Unless I didn't leave the house and didn't eat, I didn't know what else I could do to tighten things up."

"I was earning good money in Sydney, but the lifestyle is so expensive... money comes in, money goes out."

Friends of his recently ditched their lives in Sydney to move to Forster, several hours up the coast, to save money, and it got the digital marketer thinking.

He knew a mate who was working in a drive-in drive-out tree lopping gig 700 kilometres north-west of Brisbane and Abbott wondered what his life would look like if he lived in a rural area.

Moving from the big smoke in Sydney to the middle of nowhere

It didn't take much convincing for Abbott to make the leap, but took him about two months to wrap up all his affairs.

He moved up to a farm that's about a 30-minute drive from the nearest town, which only has a population of 500 people, and is thankfully living rent-free with his friend.