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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, as measured by a survey of builders.
The HIA Trades Availability Index is a measure between +2.00 and -2.00, with a positive reading indicating easier access to skilled trades and vice-versa.
“The HIA Trades Availability Index was measured at -0.48 in the September quarter 2025, a deterioration from the -0.40 reading in the previous quarter,” added Mr Devitt.
“A number of states were already seeing improving home building activity on the back of population growth, tight labour markets, recovering household incomes and relatively more affordable land. With three interest rate cuts in the back pocket, New South Wales and Victoria look to be joining the party.
“With recovering home building pipelines on top of significant volumes of renovations, non-residential and public infrastructure work ongoing across the country, demand for skilled trades will only increase.
“The softening in trades price inflation may also be short lived as a result, with trades prices having already increased by double the broader rate of wage growth across the economy since 2019.
“The deterioration in trades availability was broad-based, with bricklaying seeing the worst decline in the Index. This has been driven by the increase in the volume of new homes commencing construction, particularly in Western Australia.
“The increase in home building commencements also drove a significant increase in the price of site preparation trades, up by 8.4 per cent in the most recent 12 months.
“Without attracting more skilled workers into Australia from overseas, and further developing our existing workforce capacity, the shortage of skilled tradespeople is only expected to worsen,” concluded Mr Devitt.
By region, trades shortages continue to be most apparent outside of Sydney and Melbourne, though the situation deteriorated even in these markets, potentially reflective of homebuilding activity finally improving.
Shortages were most acute in regional Queensland (-0.92) and Perth (-0.89), followed by regional Western Australia (-0.69), Adelaide (-0.60), regional South Australia (-0.55), regional New South Wales (-0.49), Brisbane (-0.48), regional Victoria (-0.46), Sydney (-0.40) and Melbourne (-0.21).
By trade, bricklaying (-1.09) remained in the most acute shortage, followed by ceramic tiling (-0.86), carpentry (-0.74) and roofing (-0.66), while electrical trades were in equilibrium (+0.02), and plumbing (-0.20) and site preparation (-0.22) were in modest shortage.
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) has welcomed the ACT Government’s decision to progress the Missing Middle Housing reforms. This is a critical step toward increasing housing supply and improving housing choice across Canberra.
The Federal Budget 2026 introduces the most significant structural changes to housing taxation in decades. As the implications of the Budget became a little clearer this week, HIA’s Chief Economist, Tim Reardon and I have put together this summary
HIA responded to the Consultation Paper on the Review of Australia’s Mutual Recognition Schemes for Workers which details the Council’s interim findings on barriers to a single national market for workers supported by the mutual recognition framework and triggers the second round of consultation associated with the review.
HIA provided this further submission to inform the Expert Panel’s first review of the Road Transport Contracting Chain Order made on 28 April 2026.