Sun. May 12th, 2024
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If you ask Gen Z publicans Grant Champion and Tom Auriac if they stood a chance at taking out a bank loan to purchase their pub in remote Australia, they will laugh at the suggestion. 

“God no, don’t think so,” Grant says. 

“Two 24 year-olds? The bank would’ve just laughed at us.”

So instead, for the past two years, the Stonehenge Hotel in western Queensland has traded on trust. 

Drone image of Stonehenge
About 50 people live in the township of Stonehenge and surrounding properties.(Supplied)

‘Country way’ deal

Every Monday, the schoolmates transferred $1,000 to the pub’s former owner, Tony Jackson, as part of an interest-free vendor finance arrangement. 

“I left $120,000 in and they put their $50,000 [deposit] down and they paid $1,000 every Monday until it was all gone,” Tony says. 

“Never missed, they never missed.”

The pair recently made their last payment and officially own the pub outright — an accomplishment they say wouldn’t have been possible without a deal built on mutual trust.

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“A lot of people were sceptical, thinking he might take it back at any chance,” Tom says. 

“But there has to be a bit of a trust there and I think that it should be an option for more businesses if a vendor like Tony can front it and it gets a lot of people their first step into the door.

“It should be more of a common thing that people do.”

Grant Champion, Tom Auriac and Tony Jackson at Stonehenge Hotel in Western Queensland.

Tony Jackson has lived in Stonehenge since 1989.(ABC News: Hannah Walsh)

Tony has been a grazier in the region for decades, so he’s cut his fair share of deals. 

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