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“The HIA Trades Report released today provides a quarterly assessment of skilled labour availability in residential construction, as well as demand pressures identified through a survey of home builders.
“Despite rising interest rates and global turmoil, home building activity picked up in the March quarter of 2026, placing renewed pressure on an already constrained skilled workforce,” added Mr Devitt.
“The HIA Trades Availability Index recorded -0.62 in the March quarter 2026, representing a deterioration in availability on top of the structural shortage of skilled trades that Australia was already experiencing.
“Higher interest rates and recent overseas events have yet to materially impact the pool of work under construction.
“These headwinds are expected to gradually weigh on demand but not derail the ongoing recovery.
“Even a modest lift in construction activity can quickly expose underlying structural labour constraints.
“Strong population growth and tight rental markets are expected to sustain demand for new housing and renovations, while low levels of unemployment mean home building continues to compete with other sectors for access to both skilled and unskilled labour.
“Public infrastructure continues to draw skilled trades away from the private sector and will increasingly do so heading into the Brisbane Olympics.
“The current environment highlights the inability of local labour supply to adjust quickly enough.
“Combined demand from private housing and public infrastructure is therefore likely to keep capacity constrained, further reinforcing the need for skilled migration and domestic workforce development, including increased support for apprentices,” concluded Mr Devitt.
Regional Victoria (-0.28) saw the most modest shortage of skilled trades in the March quarter 2026, as all markets excluding Brisbane and regional Queensland recorded deteriorations in the Index. This was followed by Sydney (-0.49), regional New South Wales (-0.52), Melbourne (-0.57) and regional South Australia (-0.59). More acute shortages persist in regional Queensland (-0.74), Brisbane (-0.83), Perth (-1.15), Adelaide (-1.33) and regional Western Australia (-1.54).
By trade, the most acute shortages remain in bricklaying (-1.36), followed by ceramic tiling (-1.03), roofing (-0.93) and carpentry (-0.90). Electrical was the only trade in ‘surplus’ with a reading of +0.03.
Donwload our latest HIA Trades Report
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.