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“The growing popularity of modular homes and other modern building systems, including those now available through major retailers, proves that many Australians want quick, modern and simple ways to add density to their backyards,” said HIA Executive Director of Planning & Development, Sam Heckel.
“As demand for diverse housing options surges, HIA’s member survey reveals that builders expect to construct ten times more granny flats in 2026 than they did in 2022. This exponential growth highlights the growing demand for smaller, affordable and modular living solutions.
However, Mr Heckel warned that the full potential of this housing solution is being thwarted in Australia by a patchwork of inconsistent planning rules.
“Inconsistent regulations across state and local government lines are adding unnecessary complexity and thousands of dollars in hidden costs which often do not improve outcomes.
“We need a nationally consistent framework that allows secondary dwellings or granny flats up to 90 square metres to bypass lengthy planning queues through planning exemptions”, said Mr Heckel.
HIA points to recent reforms in New Zealand as a blueprint for success, where compliance with standardised design rules triggers a planning exemption, which has empowered homeowners to build without the traditional bureaucratic hurdles.
“The Federal Government should take the lead by establishing national design standards. By removing the need for costly, bespoke planning processes, we could unlock thousands of homes in established city suburbs and also regional areas,” said Mr Heckel.
“With strong demand, major retailers now offering off the shelf solutions and many homeowners with underutilised land, the right nationwide policy shift could deliver a rapid injection of housing supply across Australia,” concluded Mr Heckel.
Leaders meeting at a Housing Industry Association (HIA) hosted regional housing roundtable in Nowra, have warned that current housing policy settings are failing regional communities, and are calling for a dedicated national housing plan to address mounting supply pressures beyond Australia’s capital cities.
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) is disappointed that the NT government has chosen to rush ahead with implementation of the latest update to the National Construction Code – NCC 2025.
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) welcomes the Commonwealth and Tasmanian Government’s announcement of $165 million agreement to support the delivery of up to 4,000 new homes, including 2,101 exclusively for first home buyers across the state.
HIA does not support Victoria mandating increased water-efficiency standards for fixtures in either new or existing homes, outside of a national process and supply chains. Among first steps to obtain higher benefits are voluntarily measures to address information asymmetries. Strengthening education, promotion, and awareness campaigns through water authorities and government-led media initiatives can encourage voluntary uptake.