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“Victoria has dominated this year’s HIA Residential Building Hotspots Report, with 11 of Australia’s Top 20 building growth areas all located in Melbourne, Geelong and Ballarat,” stated Executive Director, Fiona Nield.
HIA today reveals Australia’s strongest markets for home building in the 2021 edition of the HIA Population & Residential Building Hotspots Report. The Report is aimed at finding employment growth areas targeted towards builders and tradies and identifies Hotspots in all states and territories.
“The majority of the growth is in the fringe of Melbourne as the city expands,” added Ms Nield.
“Significant infrastructure investment has occurred in this region to accommodate strong population growth in Victoria for several years.
According to the HIA Population & Residential Building Hotspots Report 2021, the Mickleham – Yuroke area, located north of Melbourne’s Tullamarine Airport, is Australia’s number one Hotspot. It had a population growth rate of 32.8 per cent during 2019/20 and $412.1 million in building approvals.
“Mickleham – Yuroke has been a regular in the National Top 20 Building Hotspots list over the past couple of years, along with second on the list, Rockbank – Mount Cottrell.
“It will be interesting to see if this trend of Victoria dominating the national list continues in future editions of this report. COVID-19 has seen a halt to overseas migration, which is a large part of Victoria’s population growth, as well as an increase in the number of residents leaving Melbourne for the rest of the country,” concluded Ms Nield.
The HIA Population & Residential Hotspots 2021 report provides a ranking of Australia’s top 20 Residential Hotspots – as well as individual rankings for each of the states and territories. Of the national Top 20:
Nationally, an area qualifies as a Hotspot if at least $150 million worth of residential building work was approved during the 2019/20 financial year, and its rate of population growth is faster than the 1.3 per cent national average.
Building approvals for dwellings in Canberra for the year to the end of March have shown some signs that the market may be turning the corner but still remain well below government targets.
“Australia has just seen its two weakest years of new home commencements in over a decade, meaning these ongoing shortages of skilled trades are not being caused by home building activity,” stated HIA Chief Economist, Tim Reardon.
“There were 48,620 new homes approved for construction in the first quarter of 2025, up by 20.8 per cent on a year earlier,” stated HIA Senior Economist Tom Devitt.
“The Housing Industry Association (HIA) calls on the newly elected Federal Government to make housing a first-order priority from day one, any delay or political grandstanding will only deepen the nation’s housing crisis,” HIA Managing Director Jocelyn Martin said today.