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The HIA Trades Report released today provides a quarterly review of the availability of skilled trades and any demand pressures on trades operating in the residential building industry.
“Despite the low volume of home building, skills shortages are persisting on the back of labour demands from other construction sectors and the wider economy,” added Mr Reardon.
“Excluding the extremes of the pandemic, one would have to go back to before the GFC to find trades shortages as acute as they are now.
“Home building is set to gain momentum across Australia as interest rates fall, and this will further add to demand for skilled labour. Activity has already been increasing in Western Australia, Queensland and South Australia on the back of strong population growth, low unemployment, tight rental markets and rising prices, and recovering real incomes.
“The shortage of skilled trades across Australia persists in every capital city and region.
“An increase in home building will further add to demand for skilled labour and put further upward pressure on labour prices.
“Despite the expected increase in home building, commencements will remain well below those necessary to achieve 1.2 million homes over five years.
“Home building activity has contracted significantly in the Sydney basin, Melbourne and the ACT, but even this has not been sufficient to arrest the rise in trades prices nationally.
“The result of these shortages is that the price of trades has increased again by 5.5 per cent in the 12 months to March 2025, compared to the broader Australian wage growth closer to 3 per cent.
“Reforms to skilled migration, including a dedicated construction visa, are needed to attract skilled tradespeople from overseas during cyclical peaks in activity.
“Of the 166,830 temporary skilled workers (Visa Subclass 482) in Australia at the end of 2024, only 4,229 were in home building trade occupations.
“Over the medium-to-long term, a domestic workforce development strategy is required that promotes careers in construction to students, recent leavers and Australians more broadly, male and female, young and old.
“Greater support is also needed for apprentices, the public and private organisations that train them, and the businesses that provide them with supervision and on-site experience,” concluded Mr Reardon.
Every market continues to have a shortage of skilled trades, with the worst shortages tending to be in the markets showing the strongest improvements in home building activity. Perth (-0.84) and Brisbane (-0.83) had the most acute shortages among the capital cities, with Sydney (-0.39), Adelaide (-0.38) and Melbourne (-0.35) more modest. Across the regions, the most acute shortage was in regional South Australia (-0.67), followed by regional Victoria (-0.55), regional Western Australia (-0.49), and regional New South Wales (-0.27), with regional Queensland (-0.04) very close to neutral.
By trade, two occupations emerged with a surplus of trades for the first time since September 2020: electrical (+0.05) and plumbing (+0.03). Site preparation is also continuing to improve, with a modest shortage of -0.14, while the readings were more acute for other trades, especially bricklaying (-0.93) and ceramic tiling (-0.91).
Download our latest HIA Trades Report
Australia does not suffer from a lack of ideas on housing policy, but from a pattern of choosing policy settings that work against each other, according to the Housing Industry Association.
Australia doesn’t have a housing policy problem because we lack ideas. We have a housing policy problem because we keep choosing the wrong ones.
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) welcomes the NT government decision not to rush changes into force for the National Construction Code (NCC) at this time.
Members are reminded that the Victorian Government has decided that NCC 2025 will commence on 1 May 2026.