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
Send me exclusive tips, early access to new launches, and special offers. I can change my mind at any time.
By clicking Get started now you agree to the terms and conditions and privacy policy.
HIA Tasmania Executive Director Benjamin Price said measures that supported first home buyers to build new homes were critical to addressing Tasmania’s housing challenges.
“Supply is the solution to Tasmania’s housing challenges,” Mr Price said.
“Measures like the First Home Owner Grant have been shown to increase new housing supply, while also helping Tasmanians get ahead and into a home of their own.”
Mr Price said the uptake of the $30,000 grant was a positive sign for aspiring home owners and the residential construction sector.
“Helping first home buyers build a new home is one of the most effective ways to support home ownership while also strengthening Tasmania’s residential construction pipeline,” he said.
“For many young Tasmanians, first home buyers face real hurdles. Tighter lending rules, higher deposits and rapidly rising land prices are all making it harder to get a foot in the door. Targeted support like the First Home Owner Grant can be a life changing difference for so many Tasmanians.”
Mr Price said directing assistance toward new home construction delivered broader economic benefits.
“When a first home buyer builds, it supports local builders, tradies, suppliers and apprentices, and it adds to Tasmania’s long term housing stock,” he said.
“That’s good for jobs, good for the economy and good for housing availability.”
Mr Price said combining first home buyer assistance with practical planning and land supply reform was key to improving affordability over the long term.
“This approach supports first home buyers and delivers the new homes Tasmania needs.
“The next step is making sure there are enough serviced lots and viable development opportunities so more Tasmanians can turn that support into a home of their own.”
The Housing Industry Association has expressed concern following the release of the report by the Committee on the Environment and Planning into the proposed Missing Middle Housing Reforms, warning that adopting the Committee’s recommendations risk delaying reforms that are critical to housing supply.
Intergenerational housing inequity in Australia is best understood not as a failure of distribution, but as the predictable consequence of a persistent failure to deliver sufficient new housing.
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) has thrown its support behind the Jobs and Skills Australia drive to start a conversation about Australia’s lifelong learning needs and the specific learning dynamics and systems that are needed.
The Northern Territory Government has confirmed that the National Construction Code (NCC) 2025 will not apply and NCC 2022 will continue to apply until a new edition of the Code is published.