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The HIA New Home Sales report is a monthly survey of the largest volume home builders in the five largest states and is a leading indicator of future detached home construction.
“The monthly rise in new home sales occurred prior to the cash rate cut in February, which should further boost market confidence,” added Mr Tapang.
“Sales have been increasing off a very low base, consistent with stable economic conditions. Unemployment remains at very low levels, while there remains an acute shortage of housing stock.
“The volume of new homes sold nationally in the three months to January 2025 were also 4.1 per cent higher compared to the same period in the previous year.
“Poor sales volumes in New South Wales and Victoria have obscured an improvement in Western Australia, Queensland and South Australia.
“This likely reflects the relative affordability of these markets, with the cost of a new detached house in Sydney and Melbourne prohibitively expensive for a larger number of households.
“The volume of detached house approvals in Australia has also picked up, with the 2024 calendar year seeing 6.8 per cent more houses approved for construction compared to 2023.
“The rise in new home sales and new detached house approvals in is consistent with expectations of an increase in the volume of homes commencing construction this year,” concluded Mr Tapang.
“New home sales in the three months to January 2025 increased by 70.5 per cent in New South Wales compared to the same time in the previous year, off a very low base. This was followed by South Australia (+22.3 per cent) and Queensland (+12.3 per cent). New home sales were virtually unchanged in Victoria (-0.5 per cent) over the same period, while Western Australia recorded a 26.1 per cent decline but only due to capacity constraints, particularly with labour.
“Home building materials have continued to experience only modest cost increases, up by 1.6 per cent in the 2024/25 financial year,” stated HIA Senior Economist, Maurice Tapang.
“Today’s interim report from the Productivity Commission overwhelmingly backs what HIA has long been saying - that the regulatory burden on businesses is getting worse in this country and there is need for a major overhaul on the approach to regulation,” said HIA Managing Director, Jocelyn Martin.
“The Housing Industry Association (HIA) welcomes the release of the Queensland Productivity Commission’s interim report into construction productivity It is a significant and necessary step toward overcoming the housing supply challenges facing Queensland,” said Michael Roberts, HIA Executive Director Queensland.
“New home building approvals in the 2024/25 financial year were up by 13.9 per cent compared to their 2023/24 trough,” stated HIA Senior Economist Tom Devitt.