5 Trends from the latest Foreign Buyer Report

Key takeaways

Foreign buyers have significantly increased their purchases of Australian real estate over the past financial year, spending $4.9 billion on 5,360 properties

This marks a substantial rise from the previous year.

Foreign buyers purchased 5,360 properties in 2022-23, up from 4,228 in 2021-22.

The average purchase price was 914,000, with China leading the investment.

Foreign buyers still constitute about 1% of all real estate purchases in Australia.

Foreign buyers are back in force with activity climbing 27%, according to the latest Foreign Buyer report.

The Treasury has just released its latest data, detailing the activity of non-resident property purchasers across Australia for FY2022–23.

Foreign buyers spent $4.9 billion on 5,360 properties which is a substantial rise from the previous year.

Alongside a notable increase in buying, several key factors indicate that behaviours around foreign buying are certainly in a state of flux.

Foreign Buyers

#1 – Foreign activity rises

One of the most significant changes between FY2021–22 and FY2022–23 was the substantial increase in foreign buyer activity.

With COVID-19 severely restricting travel to and from Australia for several years, many potential buyers put their plans on hold until restrictions eased.

According to the Treasury, from 1 July 2022 to 30 June 2023, there were 5,360 residential real estate purchases involving foreign ownership, totalling $4.9 billion.

This is up from 4,228 purchases worth $3.9 billion in 2021–22, marking a 27% increase year-over-year.

#2 – Queensland shines

While Victoria remained the strongest state for foreign buying with 2,240 transactions in FY22–23, Queensland emerged as a dark horse, significantly increasing its transaction volumes.

In FY21–22, Queensland came in second with 956 sales, just ahead of NSW’s 664.

In the latest reporting year, Queensland saw a surge to 1,121 sales, while NSW remained relatively stagnant with 656.

#3 – Evolving buyer profile

Interestingly, properties valued under $1 million made up a larger share of purchases in FY22–23, with the average sale price at $914,000.

According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, foreign buyers paid an average price of $914,000, just below the overall average price across the country of $959,300 in the March quarter.

Overall, 79.8% of sales transactions were under $1 million, up from 76.5% in FY21–22, meaning the stereotypical image of foreign buyers as multimillionaires targeting premium properties is not correct.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *