100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

Ultra-wealthy buyers prop up Australia's hottest real estate market

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

$4m commitment to help revitalise CBD streetscape

The LNP has vowed to spend $4 million to help rejuvenate a Sunshine Coast town centre. The Opposition stated that it would work with Sunshine More

IN PHOTOS: 14,000 people relish sweet return of festival

A huge crowd has converged on the pineapple fields of the Sunshine Coast for the revival of a music festival. About 14,000 people attended the More

‘Vital asset’: new disaster response hub unveiled

A new facility is set to enhance a renowned tourist region's emergency management capabilities. A Local Disaster Coordination Centre has been established at the Noosa More

Sporting group in push for new field

A sport with booming numbers on the Sunshine Coast is aiming to use the upcoming state election to secure government funding for a new More

Desalination plant dismissed amid water review vow

The LNP has ruled out building a desalination plant on the Sunshine Coast and promised to conduct a review of Queensland’s water plans, if More

Health services touted for 14-lot business park

A business park, including a possible hospital or day surgery, childcare centre, gym and church, has been proposed for a Sunshine Coast growth belt. Stockland More

Demand for housing and skyrocketing prices have no signs of slowing in South-East Queensland as the region continues to grow eight years out from the Olympics.

Queensland, and in particular the south-east, is booming.

Some 268 suburbs across the state sit in the $1 million price club, or nearly one in five, according to REA Group.

The Sunshine State trails only NSW for million-dollar suburbs and a further 37 are expected to join that club in 2025.

Brisbane, which will host the 2032 Games, is the second-most expensive city to buy a house in Australia.

Its median value has climbed to $937,479, according to CoreLogic data released in June.

Apartment blocks dot the landscape at Mooloolaba. Picture: Shutterstock

PropTrack data from July has Brisbane’s median house price annual growth only behind Perth and Adelaide.

The remainder of Queensland only trails Western Australia in annual growth for all dwellings.

Price increases across Brisbane, the Sunshine Coast and the Gold Coast have been consistent since the COVID-19 pandemic due to interstate and overseas migration.

Do you have an opinion to share? Submit a Letter to the Editor at Sunshine Coast News via news@sunshinecoastnews.com.au. You must include your name and suburb.

Queensland’s population increased by about 144,000 from September 2023, including 88,000 overseas arrivals.

The Real Estate Institute of Queensland continues to be surprised at quarterly data.

“Each quarter when we look at the data, we keep thinking to ourselves it’s probably peaked now, it’s reached its heights, and then it continues to grow,” chief executive Antonia Mercorella said.

“What the pandemic did is it drove people to property because there’s a sense of security associated with property. It’s a tangible asset, it’s a tangible place where you can invest your money.”

High demand, a lack of supply and construction constraints are ongoing issues.

Ms Mercorella said projects are costing 30 per cent more in Queensland when compared with other jurisdictions.

“We have these competing demands at the moment,” she said.

“There’s no viability for developers or builders to be doing anything at that more affordable end of the market and so the upshot of all of that is that it’s putting this immense pressure on the established housing market.

“It’s almost impossible for people to comprehend the market that we’re in.”

The state government has a plan to deliver one million homes, including 53,500 social properties, by 2046 to keep up with demand.

High demand, a lack of supply and construction constraints are ongoing issues. Picture: Shutterstock.

Some private sector homes will be far out of reach for most Queenslanders, like the “Sovereign Collection” waterfront properties set for construction on the Gold Coast by Singaporean billionaire Ching Chiat Kwong.

Four “Royal Pavilions” are expected to fetch $25 million each and six other penthouses are estimated at $9 million a pop.

These residences cater to the ultra-wealthy and are indicative of the interest in southeast Queensland’s property market, Ms Mercorella said.

“It says a lot about where we are as a state and the strength of our property market,” she said.

“We also have to recognise that there will be many who will be quite disheartened by that and feel like it’s a representation of a property market that is out of reach for so many Queenslanders.”

Help keep independent and fair Sunshine Coast news coming by subscribing to our FREE daily news feed. All it requires is your name and email at the bottom of this article.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

Hidden
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share