Melbourne’s property prices will soar to new highs

Key takeaways

A new report is forecasting Melbourne’s median house price will surge more than $110,000 to an almost $1.16m record high in the next 18 months – the equivalent of $200 a day.

And it’s not just house prices, unit prices will also reach a new record.

This means the window of opportunity will close sooner rather than later as more homebuyers and investors into the market.

A new report is forecasting Melbourne’s median house price will surge more than $110,000 to an almost $1.16m record high in the next 18 months – the equivalent of $200 a day.

Oxford Economics Australia forecasts that the price recovery will drive Melbourne’s median $1.04 million median house price to jump $110,000, or 5.5%, close to $1.157 million by mid-2026, driven by an expected resurgence in migration from both interstate and overseas.

And it’s not just house prices, unit prices will also reach a new record.

According to the report, Melbourne’s median unit price is also anticipated to increase 6.5% to an all-time $726,900 high.

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The near-term outlook is more subdued

Melbourne’s housing market outlook is less action-packed for the next 12 months, with median house values set to rise just 0.7% to $1,054,600 due to downwards trending clearance rates and an uptick of investors selling up due to increased state government and land taxes.

“The Melbourne market is not running hot,” Maree Kilroy, senior economist at Oxford Economics, said.

“Competition for properties is not as hot, more choice on the market means buyers aren’t trying to outbid a bigger pool of competing buyers.

Rising total listings have provided greater options for buyers in Melbourne, reducing the urgency to purchase, in turn leading to easing conditions,” she said.

“Slower growth in the upper quartile has become increasingly evident, hinting that, as affordability worsens, demand is being deflected from the more expensive price bracket to the middle of the market.”

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Melbourne’s property market faces headwinds and tailwinds

The Victorian government announced a slew of policy changes that impact property investors.

These include expanding the Vacant Residential Land Tax, adding an extra 1% tax on residential land left undeveloped for more than five years in established areas of Melbourne, and reducing the tax-free threshold for land tax payments from $300,000 to $50,000, which took effect on January 1.

The VIC government estimates that around 600-700 extra homes will be affected by the expansion of the tax, generating about $6 million in revenue annually.

The move is planned to ignite construction and tackle the housing supply shortage.

But the new land tax increases are the final nail in the coffin for many investors.

It may mean that many investors feel they can no longer afford an investment property in addition to their residence, and instead, there could be an uptick of investors selling up and exiting the market.

But thankfully, migration is expected to prop up prices in the longer term, the report states.

The resurgence in migration inflows will be a key support to housing demand in the recovery from 2025 onwards.

In addition to the sharp rebound in overseas arrivals, Melbourne’s net interstate migration has returned to an almost balanced position.

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Units will outperform

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