2023: Resilience, recovery and an unlikely upswing

The pressure of climbing interest rates, stretched affordability, and the ‘fixed rate cliff’ stress tested our housing market through 2023, however, resilience largely prevailed.

CoreLogic’s Best of the Best report reveals home values were broadly resilient, however there were signs that high housing costs are biting with 2024 expected to be far more subdued for capital growth.

Housing activity rebounded through early 2023 as buyers took advantage of lower prices; towards the end of 2023 affordability constraints became more pressing, skewing demand towards the middle-to-lower end of the pricing spectrum.

Certainly, lower-priced housing markets such as Perth, Brisbane and Adelaide saw resilient conditions through the national downswing period, and strong annual growth through to the end of November.

This is reflected in the Best of the Best results for 2023, which sums up the country’s annual property performance and provides an outlook for the year ahead.

Annual Change In Home Values To November 2023

Top 10 Sales Nationally

The national top 10 sales for the year featured Sydney’s usual Eastern Suburbs set, Bellevue Hill and Vaucluse, along with Melbourne’s Hawthorn and Toorak, plus Coopers Shoot in the Byron Shire of the Northern Rivers region.

Nationally, Mosman in Sydney’s Lower North Shore recorded the highest total value of house sales over the 12 months to September at $1.462 billion, with total unit sales in Surfers Paradise reaching $1.175 billion.

Top 10 sales nationally

Best and worst performers for value growth

Across the capital city markets, Perth claimed eight of the top 10 spots for the strongest growth in house values, with Brookdale, Armadale and Hilbert all up more than 30.0% annually and median house values sub-$550,000.

For unit markets, Perth (5), Brisbane (4) and Adelaide (1) took out the top 10 for largest gains, with units in Brisbane’s Slacks Creek surging 27.4% over the year, with seven of the top 10 recording median values under $400,000.

The weakest capital city house suburbs featured Hobart’s upper end, with North Hobart and Taroona down -13.9% and -13.8% respectively, while the top 10 worst-performing unit markets were more diverse, spanning Hobart, Darwin, Melbourne and Canberra.

Across regional Australia, NSW’s Tralee was the top-performing house market with 34.2% capital growth, while QLD’s Emerald saw the highest value growth for units at 20.9%.

Rochester (VIC) was the worst-performing house market, with values down – 26.0%, while Mudgee (NSW) units recorded value falls of -11.4% over the past year.

Best performers 2023 – houses

Best performers houses

Best performers 2023 – units

Best performers units

Best-performing rental markets

2023 was marked by staggering levels of net overseas migration, largely influenced by the disruption that COVID-related border closures had on migration patterns.

While this likely added some upward pressure to home values, the most obvious response in housing metrics was in the rental market.

Since the re-opening of international borders, strong rent growth has been exhibited in markets with historically high exposure to overseas migration, and this is also reflected in the Best of the Best results for 2023.

Nationally, Kensington in Sydney’s Eastern suburbs had the highest house rent growth in the year to November, up 24.9%.

In the unit segment, Lakemba in Sydney’s Inner South West saw rents soar 28.1%, closely followed by Wiley Park up 28.0%.

WA’s Kambalda East (15.5%) and Boulder (12.0%) recorded the highest gross rental yields nationally for houses and units respectively.

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