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Billionaire heiress Sophia Forrest’s penthouse for sale

Sophia Forrest with Mystic Journey for cox plate

Actor Sophia Forrest, the daughter of mining billionaires Andrew and Nicole Forrest, is selling her Sydney home.

Actor Sophia Forrest, the daughter of mining billionaires Andrew and Nicole Forrest, has listed in Waterloo.

Forrest made the move from Perth in 2018, buying the penthouse for $1.8m in 2020, then taking up residency with now wife, fellow actor Zara Zoe.

The split-level three bedroom, two bathroom penthouse sits atop Warehouse 5 on Phillip Street with 183 sqm of space.

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Sophia Forrest’s inner city home.

One of the three bedrooms.

Belle Property agents Blair Cardile and James Perlowski have the off-market penthouse listing.

There are hefty $5000 quarterly strata levies for the apartment first sold for $755,000 in 2003.

The development, constructed around a pool and parklands, has 127 apartments over five buildings.

With 33 sales over the past year, Proptrack calculates Waterloo’s three bedroom median apartment price as $1.4m, up 3.9 per cent annually. The median was $1.43m when the penthouse last sold in late 2020.

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Plenty of light.

And views.

It was 1998 when developer St Hilliers bought the former the 1.4ha Chubb site for $5.8m.

Warehouse 5’s highest price sits at $2,185,000 from a 2017 sale.

Forrest’s separated parents own abode’s in the Sydney CBD’s Quay Grande and at Point Piper.

Her next role is in July at Carriageworks in Black Swan State Theatre Company’s production of Prima Facie.

MORE: Byron Bay’s Beach Hotel sold for $140m

Celebs/Fashion at Cox Plate

Sophia Forrest. Picture: Nicki Connolly


MORE: Wild reason Aussie has 300 homes

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June 2, 2025/0 Comments/by JKents
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The housing type driving building approvals fall

April saw a 19% plunge in building approvals for private dwellings excluding houses, led by a drop in one key housing type.

The monthly building approvals data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) shows the total number of dwellings approved across the country fell by 5.7% to 14,633 in April.

This follows a continuous decline from February and March numbers.

Apartments led the decline in approvals for private dwellings excluding houses – which included semi-detached, terrace houses, townhouses and apartments – ABS head of construction statistics Daniel Rossi said.

The total number of dwellings approved fell 5.7% to 14,633 in April. Picture: Getty

“A drop in apartment approvals drove a 19% fall in private dwellings excluding houses,” Mr Rossi said.

According to the data, 2539 apartments were approved in April, which was a a 17.38% drop from the 3073 approved in March.

To meet its National Housing Accord target of 1.2 million new homes by 2029, Australia needs to approve and complete about 20,000 homes a month.

According to the annual State of the Housing System 2025 report, 938,000 new homes are expected to be built over the five-year period – leaving a 262,000 shortfall.

Property Council group executive policy and advocacy Matthew Kandelaars said the apartment numbers were volatile but followed a continuous trend.

“Just 5612 apartments were approved in March and April. This is a far cry from the 15,029 greenlit during March and April in the apartment boom of 2016,” Mr Kandelaars said.

“We will not meet our housing targets without the heavy lifting that needs to come from apartments that can deliver homes at scale close to transport, existing infrastructure and amenities.”

Detached house approvals were up 3.1% to 9349, led by NSW and Queensland. This result is also 4.6% higher than April 2024.

“New South Wales and Queensland were the main drivers of the overall rise in private sector house approvals, with both states up 7.3% in April,” Mr Rossi said.

“New South Wales had over 2000 private sector houses approved for the first time since December 2023.”

Apartment approvals drove a 19% fall in private dwellings excluding houses. Picture: Getty

Housing Industry Association economist Maurice Tapang said the rise of detached approvals was consistent with new-home sales increasing in April.

“This increased volume of house approvals also came before the second interest-rate cut in May this year, which indicates other strong demand factors are also driving growth in approvals,” Mr Tapang said.

“Australia’s unemployment rate remains at historically low levels, while real wages have been increasing. Home buyers appear to be increasingly returning to market, assisted by expectations of interest rate cuts.”

Results varied by state

When it comes to state-by-state performance, results were mixed.

NSW and Victoria led the overall drop by 7.8% and 6.5% respectively.

Queensland also fell by 1.3% but Tasmania, Western Australia and South Australia rose by 12.7%, 9.6% and 9.5%.

Urban Taskforce CEO Tom Forrest said NSW continues to lead the declines but is hopeful with legislation passing for incentives such as Help to Buy.

“The results from April show that unless NSW Planning facilitates feasible development that is supported by infrastructure, it won’t happen. That is where we currently sit,” he said.

“On the positive front, the NSW Government has already introduced legislation to facilitate the Commonwealth’s Help to Buy scheme. This is a good step and shows urgency and imperative.”

Are you interested in buying and building new? Check out our dedicated New Homes section.

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June 2, 2025/0 Comments/by JKents
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Why Frankston, Tarneit and Craigieburn are hot picks for Melbourne’s young property buyers | PropTrack

First Home Buyers

Young Melbourne buyers are targeting growth suburbs like Craigieburn and Pakenham to get ahead in Melbourne’s tough housing market. Picture: Tony Gough

Millennials and Gen Z might have a tougher road to property ownership than their parents, but experts say there are still ways to trade up to even some of Melbourne’s wealthiest areas.

You just need to know where to look.

In Craigieburn, the 2025 median house price sits at $610,000 — six times the nation’s about $100,000 average annual wage.

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In Tarneit, the typical house costs $645,000, with other other suburbs offering a more affordable starting point including Wyndham Vale, $607,000, Pakenham, $590,000, Werribee, $610,000, and Frankston, $715,000.

And with access to infrastructure, lifestyle amenities and growing populations, there’s potential for those prices to grow.

Ray White Frankston agent George Devic said demand was strong in the Frankston area, particularly from younger buyers and investors.

“If you stay sub-$850,000, you’re seeing a lot of first-home buyers and both local and interstate investors in the market,” Mr Devic said.

“Buyers are active, and we’re seeing the whole suburb remain attractive, from entry-level homes to blue-chip pockets.”

PropTrack economist Eleanor Creagh said equity growth remains possible for buyers who choose wisely.

PropTrack senior economist Eleanor Creagh added that while buyers entering the market today were unlikely to see the same exponential gains as their parents, real estate was still a powerful long-term investment.

“Getting into the market remains a crucial first step, and with the right purchase in the right location, there’s certainly potential to build wealth over time,” Ms Creagh said.

First-home buyer for real estate weekend yarn

First-home buyers are snapping up affordable properties in Melbourne’s outer suburbs to build long-term wealth. Photo: Wayne Taylor

Cheaper to buy than rent Vic 2025 - Case Study Nunawading

Suburbs once overlooked are now hot property, as Gen Z and Millennials shift buying strategies. Picture: Jason Edwards

“Even if the journey looks different, the principle of long-term equity growth still holds true.”

The concept relies on a relatively affordable investment gaining value over a long period of time. If a person can acquire multiple homes it could eventually allow them to sell the group of more affordable residences to fund a home in a much pricier neighbourhood.

Buyer’s advocate Madeleine Roberts says young Aussies are using smart tactics like rentvesting to build wealth through property.

M R Advocacy director and buyers’ agent Madeleine Roberts said young Australians were finding new ways to build wealth, from rentvesting to buying in future lifestyle suburbs.

“I grew up in Rye, back then it was a sleepy beach town. Now it’s a million-dollar suburb,” Ms Roberts said.

“It shows how much potential lies in lifestyle-driven areas that were once overlooked.”

Case study for weekend story

Rising demand in areas like Frankston is driven by investors and young buyers priced out of inner Melbourne. Picture: David Caird

Melbourne city view

Strategic property purchases in lifestyle suburbs are helping younger Australians get on the path to ownership. Photo – iStock

The buyer’s agent added that younger buyers were “more investment-minded” than previous generations.

“They know the dream home isn’t going to magically land in their lap,” she said.

“They’re using property as a wealth-building tool, it’s about being strategic from the start and understanding how to make the market work for them.”


Sign up to the Herald Sun Weekly Real Estate Update. Click here to get the latest Victorian property market news delivered direct to your inbox.

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david.bonaddio@news.com.au

The post Why Frankston, Tarneit and Craigieburn are hot picks for Melbourne’s young property buyers | PropTrack appeared first on realestate.com.au.

June 1, 2025/0 Comments/by JKents
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Creating a better value proposition: Now Streaming

Tune in to Inman Access as Vija Williams, head of industry at Place, tells you how to rework your brokerage’s value proposition for more effective recruitment.

June 1, 2025/0 Comments/by JKents
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Werribee family’s almost $200k Amazon thanks to cat

4 Amazon Place, Werribee - for herald sun real estate

Ziggy the cat, pictured on the roof of 4 Amazon Place, Werribee, inadvertently helped their owners to an almost $200,000 windfall.

A Werribee home sale that had even the auctioneer nervous by the halfway mark, has gone on to raise the home’s price almost $200,000 in fewer than two years.

And a homemade cat run for their pet Ziggy was a big part of the success.

Josh Palmer and his partner Shayla were “pretty nervous” as the 4 Amazon Place home started off with low level bidding and stalled in the middle of its price guide.

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“And then it skyrocketed,” Mr Palmer said. “I was just in a whole lot of shock.”

Ironically, celebrations for the sale boosted by the carpenter’s renovation work had to be kept limited as he was booked in to help some family with a reno on Sunday.

“But we will be looking for another house to renovate,” he added.

They’ll also be taking some time to enjoy the space that they’ve filled with memories, including bringing their daughter Mia, 18 months, home to.

4 Amazon Place, Werribee - for herald sun real estate

An impressive renovation to the home helped bring in buyers.

4 Amazon Place, Werribee - for herald sun real estate

The charming facade appealed to a range of buyers, but it was ultimately a first-home buyer couple that claimed the keys.

While the renovation gave the buyers confidence they could just move in and enjoy the home, it was a cat run built down the side for the Palmer family’s cat Ziggy that had them enthused.

Hocking Stuart’s Justin Tong said while the home’s renovation, and feline-friendly reno, had given it an edge — buyers hadn’t let on until well into the auction.

“It was at $550,000 at the halftime break, with only two bidders, and I was a little bit concerned,” Mr Tong said.

“Then I came out and threatened to pass it in and it just went off.”

In a sign that fear of missing out (FOMO) is returning, the agent said such gambits hadn’t been as effective recently as buyers were better at holding their nerve.

Records show the owners paid $547,000 in 2023.

4 Amazon Place, Werribee - for herald sun real estate

The family will remember the home as the property where they brought daughter Mia home to after she was born.

4 Amazon Place, Werribee - for herald sun real estate

A cosy living zone in the Werribee home added to the appeal after a handful of frosty nights.

“So it has gone up nearly $200,000 in two years,” Mr Tong said.

A young couple buying their first home outbid an investor and a downsizer.

The agent said rising demand after rate cuts had created a “perfect storm” for home sellers in recent weeks.

“Two underbidders is fairly common at the moment,” Mr Tong said.

The agency sold three out of their four auctions yesterday, with the only one falling short priced over $1m. Co-worker Samantha McCarthy yesterday secured a $740,000 sale at the top of the advertised range for 22 Mirrambeek Rd, Hoppers Crossing.


Sign up to the Herald Sun Weekly Real Estate Update. Click here to get the latest Victorian property market news delivered direct to your inbox.

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6 dead giveaways your marketing content was written by AI

From odd punctuation to generic phrasing, Alyssa Stalker shows you how to spot AI’s fingerprints, and keep your real voice front and center.

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Debate settled: The generations that have it worst when buying a home

A new report has settled the argument of which generation of homebuyer had it the hardest once and for all.

Unequivocally, it’s Gen Z. And the outlook for Gen Alpha looks bleak as well.

Exclusive PropTrack data has revealed the cost of buying a house or unit in Adelaide today far eclipses what it did in previous decades, even when you factor in inflation.

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In 1990, Adelaide’s median house price was $98,000, which in today’s money would be $247,800.

Yet Adelaide’s median now sits at $832,500, making it 8.49 times what it was back them, and 3.5 times what it would have been in today’s dollars.

Ellissa Noolan, 27, and her partner Ryan Litchfield, 30, have recently bought their first home, despite rising prices. Pic: Dean Martin.

The gap closes slightly when you look at the year 2000 when it was $135,000, or $264,000 in today’s dollars.

That makes today’s median more than six times what it was then, and still 3.15 times what the 2000 price would be in today’s currency.

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In 2010, Adelaide’s median had leapt to $405,000, or $592,600 in today’s money, making today’s median more than double this, and almost one-and-a-half times more expensive than what that 2010 median would have been in today’s money.

PropTrack economist Angus Moore said the rapid growth in home prices since the early 1990s was linked to lower interest rates during that time.

The cash rate now sits at 3.85 per cent compared to a high of 17 per cent in 1990.

“Interest rates are a lot lower and more stable than they were in the 1980s or 1990s, which has made mortgages more affordable,” Mr Moore said.

PropTrack economist Angus Moore pictured

Lower interest rates reduce the cost of borrowing, allowing buyers to afford larger loans, which can drive up property prices.

For first-home buyers, the boost in borrowing power does not offset the growing cost of saving for a deposit.

“The deposit hurdle is just unequivocally harder than it was four or five decades ago, and that has manifested in home ownership rates which have fallen over those years,” Mr Moore said.

“Most first-home buyers don’t have a 20 per cent deposit available.”

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Supplied Editorial Aerial image of Adelaide CBD skyline. Picture: Supplied by Colliers

House price growth across Adelaide has far surpassed inflation. Picture: Supplied by Colliers

According to the data, Adelaide’s unit value has also soared ahead of adjusted prices, with the current median of $566,000 seven times the actual price of $80,000 in 1990, and 2.9 times what that would be in today’s money.

Find how your suburb has performed here

In 1990, Adelaide’s most expensive properties were Walkerville houses, which had a median price of $242,500.

That money today won’t even buy you Adelaide’s cheapest properties today – Kurralta Park units, which have a median price of $385,000.

ICU nurse Ellissa Noolan, 27, and her partner Ryan Litchfield, 30, who recently bought through a HomeStart loan in Happy Valley, South Australia. Pic: Dean Martin.

ICU nurse Ellissa Noolan, 27, and her partner Ryan Litchfield, 30, have recently bought in Happy Valley after a long search that involved her moving back home for a year to save for a deposit.

“We were renting and we were finding it hard to save for a deposit so we both moved in with my parents,” Ms Noolan said.

“Our concern was that house prices would just keep going up.

“We decided to go with HomeStart, who allowed us to borrow a bit more, which meant we could buy sooner – and get in before any further house price rises.

“We both have good jobs and did all we could to save – it’s definitely tough for first home buyers.”

HomeStart chief executive officer Andrew Mills

HomeStart CEO Andrew Mills said it was great to see Ellissa and Ryan to enter the market.

“Buying a home is harder than ever, especially for first home buyers trying to save a deposit,” he said.

The post Debate settled: The generations that have it worst when buying a home appeared first on realestate.com.au.

June 1, 2025/0 Comments/by JKents
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Buying a home 5 times harder now than in 1980

Spend Over Save

Toby Tremain and Georgia Stel , both 25, would rather enjoy life than skimp to save for a house they may never be able to buy. pic: Lyndon Mechielsen/Courier Mail

It is now five times harder for young Queenslanders to buy their first home than it was for their Boomer and Gen-X parents, according to shock new analysis exposing the enduring impact of the nation’s longest property boom.

Extensive PropTrack analysis over 45 years shows a typical house in Brisbane, which cost just $32,750 in 1980, is now valued at an astounding 420 per cent more in 2025 when adjusted for inflation.

That’s because the $32,750 spent on a home in 1980 equates to about $174,600 today, but the current median house price has skyrocketed to $910,000.

The analysis reveals how much harder it is for the current generation to buy property compared to their parents’ era, and has prompted experts to sound the alarm for first home buyers as saving for a deposit becomes more out of reach than ever before.

7 Galley Street, Kepnock is listed at $525,000

SEE WHAT HOMES REALLY USED TO COST IN YOUR SUBURB

PropTrack economist Angust Moore said young people were taking longer to enter the market, relying more on family support, or accessing government incentives to buy with a smaller deposit.

“The deposit hurdle is just unequivocally harder than it was four or five decades ago, and that has manifested in home ownership rates which have fallen over those years,” Mr Moore said.

He said lower interest rates now than the 1980s and early 1990s, when they surged to a high of 17 per cent, had helped drive up property prices in that time due to greater competition and demand.

Brisbane’s median value surged from $32,750 in December 1980 to $95,000 in December 1990, $152,000 in 2000, $465,000 in 2010, and $910,000 by March 2025.

Brisbane units show a slightly less dramatic trend, rising from $38,750 in 1980 to $636,000 today.

PropTrack economist Angus Moore

The trend played out differently across suburbs, with blue-chip as well as entry-level areas included among the most striking examples of real price growth.

A typical home in inner-city Hawthorne, priced at $2.125m in 2025, is worth more than ten times its inflation-adjusted 1980 value of $164,500.

In Woodridge, homes cost $24,950 45 years ago – equal to about $133,000 today. But the Logan suburb’s current median house price is $650,000.

The long boom on the back of the Covid-19 pandemic has seen prices rise even more sharply than in the 1990s, when rates plummeted and the real estate market flourished.

Spend Over Save

Mr Tremain Ms Stel 25 enjoy their morning coffee in Teneriffe, Brisbane. Pic: Lyndon Mechielsen/Courier Mail

Newstead locals and engineers Toby Tremain and Georgia Stel, both 25, said they were being pushed out of their preferred suburb by astronomical house prices and currently preferred to rent and live in the city.

“We are both open to owning an apartment, we’re not like we must have a house and live in the city,” Mr Tremain said.

“I understand that’s not feasible.

“But I think the trade-off is, like living in this area right now for us is really enjoyable.”

25 Botany Drive, South Ripley is listed at $1.29m

Rising prices aren’t exclusive to the capital, with regional and coastal centres also recording huge real growth.

On the Gold Coast, houses in Surfers Paradise were already more expensive than Brisbane in 1980 at $74,500. That figure would be equivalent to $397,200 considering rising living costs, yet a typical home in the Glitter Strip now costs $1.35m.

Another Gold Coast example, Ashmore, was closer to Brisbane’s median in 1980 at $43,950 — $234,300 in today’s dollars. Its current house price is $1.138m.

57 Jocelyn Street, Caboolture is listed at offers above $2m

Further north, a house in Aitkenvale, Townsville had a median of $29,625 in December 1980, or $158,000 adjusted. It’s now worth more than three times that amount at $514,000.

Real Estate Institue of Queensland (REIQ) CEO Antonia Mercorella said price growth was driven by a chronic undersupply of housing.

“Scarcity continues to put upward pressure on prices, particularly impacting first-home buyers who now face a vastly different affordability landscape than previous generations,” Ms Mercorella said.

“If we want to enable sustainable price growth and ensure future generations the same opportunity to own a home, housing policy must be squarely focused on supply.

“Any attempt to improve affordability without significantly increasing housing stock is doomed to fall short.”

REIQ CEO Antonia Mercorella

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Buyers agent Alex Pope said Baby Boomer and Gen X homeowners were unlocking equity in their properties to help younger family members buy through a guarantor loan.

“First-home buyers are often getting support from mum and dad, and in some ways it’s very easy for the older generation who have fared really well from the market to do this,” Mr Pope said.

“As a young person who may have just started in a career, recently moved out of home and paying rent, you’re in a really expensive time of life while your income is probably still quite low, so getting the deposit is the hardest part.”

Mr Pope advised young buyers to treat their first home as a stepping stone – “your first home isn’t your last, but it does catapult you to the next”.

Buyers agent Alex Pope

By starting in a duplex, unit, or renovator, young buyers could build equity and eventually move into a more ideal property as their careers and incomes grew, he said.

Only a tiny number of suburbs across Greater Brisbane remained at 2000 or even 1990 prices. Russell Island was most frequently highlighted in the data as having current prices comparable to historical values of various other suburbs.

Prices in a handful of other outer suburbs including North Booval, Logan Central, Goodna and South Brisbane units were now on par with some values from 20-plus years ago.

But the overwhelming majority of homes had now well-surpassed those old benchmarks, cementing a major decline in affordability.

The post Buying a home 5 times harder now than in 1980 appeared first on realestate.com.au.

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How much 1990s Hobart homes would cost today

If you bought a Sandy Bay home in 1990 and still own it, that was a great move financially.

In 1990, homebuyers could secure a house in one of Tasmania’s most affluent suburbs for less than Hobart’s most affordable neighbourhood today.

Exclusive PropTrack research shows a typical ‘90s Sandy Bay home had a median value of $161,500. Adjusted for inflation, that is the equivalent of $335,500 in today’s money.

But not one greater Hobart suburb has a median price that is that low in 2025. The closest is Hobart’s cheapest area, Gagebrook, at $387,000.

Sandy Bay’s median house price is currently $1.315m, or 291 per cent higher than the adjusted for inflation price.

MORE: Revealed: Where it’s cheaper to buy than rent in Tassie

$1m-plus price surge: What your home could be worth in 2030

Hobart’s hotspots for home price growth revealed

No. 3 Lasswade Ave, Sandy Bay is on the market for $4.5m-plus with Elders Tasmania.

No. 21 Briar Cres is the only house for sale in Gagebrook today. Listed with LJ Hooker Pinnacle Property at “Offers over $399,000”. Picture: realestate.com.au

The trend can be seen across Hobart, with ‘90s inflation-adjusted prices falling well short of today’s values.

A typical home in Blackmans Bay today is $860,000. That’s over three-times more expensive than the inflation-adjusted ‘90s value of $229,500.

It’s the same story in Moonah, where a ‘90s home worth $80,000 equates to $166,200 in 2025. But the median is currently $615,000; almost four times higher.

No. 13 Flowerpot Crs, Blackmans Bay is listed with Elders Tasmania at $970,000-plus.

Listed for sale with Roberts, No. 83 Butler Ave, Moonah is seeking “Offers over $895,000”. Picture: realestate.com.au

PropTrack economist Angus Moore said the rapid growth in home prices since the early 1990s was linked to lower interest rates during that time.

The Reserve Bank of Australia this month cut 25 basis points from the official cash rate, now at 3.85 per cent compared to a high of 17 per cent in 1990.

“Interest rates are a lot lower and more stable than they were in the 1980s or 1990s, which has made mortgages more affordable,” Mr Moore said.

Lower interest rates reduce the cost of borrowing, allowing buyers to afford larger loans, which can drive up property prices.

“When interest rates are lower, people can afford to service a larger mortgage, which then creates greater competition in the housing market and that has allowed home prices to rise much faster than wages,” he said.

PropTrack economist Angus Moore.

But for first-home buyers, the boost in borrowing power does not offset the growing cost of saving for a deposit.

“The deposit hurdle is just unequivocally harder than it was four or five decades ago, and that has manifested in homeownership rates which have fallen over those years,” Mr Moore said.

“Most first-home buyers don’t have a 20 per cent deposit available.”

PropTrack 2023-2024 figures showed it took an average-income Tasmanian household six years to save a 20 per cent home loan deposit. Ten years ago it took four years of savings, and 20 years ago it took three years to gather a deposit.

CAFE SOCIETY Adrian Kelly

View Hobart chief executive Adrian Kelly. Picture: Luke Bowden

View Real Estate chief executive Adrian Kelly agreed that deposits are a major hurdle. He said stamp duty is another.

“We do see parents helping their children when they can afford to, as saving a deposit is such a challenge now, especially for people who are renting,” Mr Kelly said.

“The only fix for this challenge is increased supply, which will take a couple of decades to work through.

“Anything that gets a first homebuyer out of a rental into their first home is wonderful because that also frees up a rental for someone who needs it.”


HOW MUCH HOME VALUES HAVE GROWN
Suburb 1990 median price Equivalent to in today’s dollars 2025 median price
Blackmans Bay $110,500 $229,500 $860,000
Claremont $82,000 $170,300 $531,000
Glenorchy $78,000 $162,000 $560,000
Howrah $124,500 $258,600 $720,000
Kingston $101,500 $210,800 $738,000
Lenah Valley $124,000 $257,600 $750,000
Moonah $80,000 $166,200 $615,000
New Town $117,000 $243,000 $857,500
Sandy Bay $161,500 $335,500 $1,315,000
West Hobart $118,200 $245,600 $940,000
Source: PropTrack

The post How much 1990s Hobart homes would cost today appeared first on realestate.com.au.

June 1, 2025/0 Comments/by JKents
https://www.juliankent.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/logo.png 0 0 JKents https://www.juliankent.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/logo.png JKents2025-06-01 00:01:562025-06-01 00:01:56How much 1990s Hobart homes would cost today

Darwin homes cheaper than in 2010

This Gunn home sold for $310,000 in 2002, $505,000 in 2011 and $650,000 in 2025. Picture: realestate.com.au

Darwin homebuyers are paying less for real estate than they were 15 years ago in all but one suburb once median property prices are adjusted for inflation.

PropTrack’s generational study converted past median house prices into today’s dollars and found Darwin buyers were paying up to 31 per cent less for houses than they were in 2010, and up to 54 per cent less for units.

Stuart Park was the only suburb where buyers were paying more today when looking at the adjusted values, with the median house price up 13 per cent from $786,700 (adjusted for inflation) to $891,000.

In Gunn, buyers are paying 31 per cent less than in 2010, with the suburb recording a current average house price of $522,500 compared to a corrected price of $762,400 15 years ago.

In Wagaman the difference was $228,500 or 31 per cent, while in Lyons it was $205,700 or 21 per cent.

In the unit market, the adjusted median price in Driver was 54 per cent higher in 2010 compared to 2025.

In Darwin City, the 2010 median unit price of $575,000 – equal to $797,100 today – dropped 52 per cent to a median of $380,000.

While in Larrakeyah, the drop from the adjusted 2010 prices was 48 per cent, from $686,200 to $360,000.

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This Wagaman home sold for $156,000 in 2000, $530,000 in 2012 and $610,000 in 2025. Picture: realestate.com.au

Real Estate Central director, Michael Van De Graaf said in 2010 the Darwin property market was between two peaks influenced by major projects.

“The market took off in about 2003 with the Bechtel gas project,” he said.

“We had a bit of a downturn around about 2010 and then the market picked up again with the announcement of the Inpex project.

“We had so much work up here, but the problem was we then had strong population growth and accommodation was hard to find, so rents went through the roof.

“Initially we saw a lot of interstate investors in the market and then the local mum and dad investors.

“I’d say 2014 was the top of the market – 2010 was much more affordable than 2014.”

Mr Van De Graaf said currently Darwin was the most affordable capital city in the country, with strong returns and potential for solid capital growth once again attracting investors.

“Darwin is certainly a market on the tipping point, if not already past it,” he said.

“What we’re seeing now is a lot of interstate investors around that median price range.

“We’re selling around about 50 per cent of properties to investors … and supply is starting to dwindle.”

Real Estate Central director, Michael Van De Graaf. Picture: Supplied

The PropTrack generational study also showed today’s Darwin homebuyers were paying far more than those from 2000.

The median house price in Bakewell 25 years ago was $53,250. Corrected for inflation, that is $97,000.

Today, buyers in Bakewell are paying 400 per cent more, with the average cost of a house sitting at $485,000.

In Virginia, the difference between the adjusted 2000 median house price and the current median house price was 375 per cent, while in Gunn it was 345 per cent and in Humpty Doo it was 148 per cent.

PropTrack economist Angus Moore said the rapid growth in home prices since the 1990s was linked to lower interest rates during that time.

The cash rate in 1990 was 17 per cent but had dropped to 6.25 per cent by the end of 2000 and 4.25 per cent by the end of 2001.

Mr Moore said lower interest rates allowed for larger loans.

“When interest rates are lower, people can afford to service a larger mortgage, which then creates greater competition in the housing market and that has allowed home prices to rise much faster than wages,” he said.

The Reserve Bank of Australia this month cut 25 basis points from the official cash rate to 3.85 per cent.

Mr Moore said while this gave buyers a boost in borrowing power, it did not offset the growing cost of saving for a deposit.

“The deposit hurdle is just unequivocally harder than it was four or five decades ago, and that has manifested in home ownership rates which have fallen over those years,” he said.

Mr Moore said young people were taking longer to enter the market, relying more on family support, or accessing government incentives to buy with a smaller deposit.

“Most first-homebuyers don’t have a 20 per cent deposit available,” he said.

This Bakewell home sold for $250,000 in 2005, $367,000 in 2008, $370,000 in 2020 and $630,000 in 2025. Picture: realestate.com.au

DARWIN PROPERTY PRICES – 2010 VS 2025

HOUSES
Suburb Median price 2010 Adjusted to today’s $ 2025 median price Difference
Gunn $550,000 $762,400 $522,500 -31%
Wagaman $540,000 $748,500 $520,000 -31%
Lyons $707,500 $980,700 $775,000 -21%
Anula $540,000 $748,500 $545,000 -27%
Karama $483,025 $669,600 $470,000 -30%
Leanyer $572,500 $793,600 $598,000 -25%
Wulagi $532,500 $738,200 $545,000 -26%
Durack $555,500 $770,000 $579,000 -25%
Millner $541,750 $751,000 $560,000 -25%
Bakewell $486,250 $674,000 $485,000 -28%
Woodroffe $460,000 $637,700 $450,000 -29%
Farrar $547,500 $758,900 $572,500 -25%
Malak $500,017 $693,100 $510,000 -26%
Gray $435,000 $603,000 $420,000 -30%
Moulden $426,500 $591,200 $425,000 -28%
Driver $449,000 $622,400 $460,000 -26%
Moil $510,000 $707,000 $547,500 -23%
Tiwi $515,000 $713,900 $575,000 -19%
Wanguri $535,000 $741,600 $622,500 -16%
Jingili $540,000 $748,500 $630,000 -16%
Rosebery $500,000 $693,100 $590,000 -15%
Howard Springs $590,000 $817,900 $770,000 -6%
Rapid Creek $585,000 $810,900 $800,000 -1%
Humpty Doo $482,500 $668,800 $660,000 -1%
Nightcliff $745,000 $1,032,700 $1,025,000 -1%
Stuart Park $567,500 $786,700 $891,000 13%
UNITS
Suburb Median price 2010 Adjusted to today’s $ 2025 median price Difference
Driver $385,000 $533,700 $247,500 -54%
Darwin City $575,000 $797,100 $380,000 -52%
Larrakeyah $495,000 $686,200 $360,000 -48%
Bakewell $392,000 $543,400 $289,000 -47%
Gray $360,000 $499,000 $272,500 -45%
Leanyer $407,500 $564,900 $328,000 -42%
Stuart Park $540,000 $748,500 $437,100 -42%
Bayview $760,000 $1,053,500 $627,500 -40%
Millner $395,000 $547,500 $335,000 -39%
Coconut Grove $405,000 $561,400 $370,000 -34%
Parap $460,000 $637,700 $435,000 -32%
Fannie Bay $480,000 $665,400 $460,000 -31%
Rapid Creek $415,000 $575,300 $405,000 -30%
Rosebery $395,000 $547,500 $396,000 -28%
Nightcliff $303,000 $420,000 $330,000 -21%

SOURCE: PropTrack

The post Darwin homes cheaper than in 2010 appeared first on realestate.com.au.

June 1, 2025/0 Comments/by JKents
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