Enter your email and password to access secured content, members only resources and discount prices.
Did you become a member online? If not, you will need to activate your account to login.
If you are having problems logging in, please call HIA helpdesk on 1300 650 620 during business hours.
If you are having problems logging in, please call HIA helpdesk on 1300 650 620 during business hours.
Enables quick and easy registration for future events or learning and grants access to expert advice and valuable resources.
Enter your details below and create a login
Taxation of the Housing Sector Report is an update to the work undertaken in 2019.
This Report shows that:
“Australia has an acute shortage of housing because governments continue to tax new home building and impede productivity in the sector,” stated HIA Chief Economist, Tim Reardon.
“In Sydney, governments are adding in excess of half a million dollars to the cost of a new home, that new home buyers are then required to repay for decades as part of their mortgage.
“With half of the cost of a new home being taxes and government charges, new home buyers are spending 15 years of a 30-year mortgage just paying off that tax.
“New home buyers also have to pay interest on top of that tax. Over 30 years, the value of taxes plus the interest on it amounts to more than the value of the home itself.
“With government taxes, fees and charges so high, the term ‘house and land package’ may as well be changed to ‘house and tax package’.”
“In Brisbane and Adelaide, government taxes, fees and charges on new homes have doubled in five years. Not even the best, legitimate investment strategies could achieve that same level of return.
“The primary solution to resolve Australia’s housing shortages is to remove government taxes and red tape to allow the industry to deliver the homes Australians are demanding.
“Delays on getting approvals take much longer than the time it takes to actually build a home.
“New home building taxes appear to be the target of governments under fiscal pressure, seeking to find other sources of revenue. What they do not realise is that when they increase taxes on housing, there ends up being fewer of them.
“It is incongruous that governments set home building targets, while at the same time tax new home building even more. The more government tax new homes, the fewer homes will be built.
“Taxes on housing have not resulted in more of them being built. Higher taxes on new housing will only lead to fewer new homes and higher prices for existing homes.
“If governments were keen to solve the affordability problem, they need to look at the tax they are imposing on new housing,” concluded Mr Reardon.
“There were 9,490 detached homes approved in the month of April 2025, up by 3.3 per cent compared to the previous month,” stated HIA Senior Economist Maurice Tapang.
The Treasurer has handed down the 2025/26 Tasmanian Budget. The Budget focuses on alleviating cost of living pressures, health, education and infrastructure, while mapping out a path to a fiscal balance surplus in 2032/2033.
“The NSW planning system has failed to deliver the number of homes we desperately need and we fully support removing the politics from housing, to address this growing crisis,” said Brad Armitage, HIA Executive Director NSW.
The Victorian Opposition’s announcement that it would remove stamp duty for first-home buyers spending up to $1 million on a new or existing home if elected at next year’s state election, is a positive step towards improving home affordability,” says Steven Wojtkiw, HIA Victoria Deputy Executive Director.