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where is it the highest and what does it mean for housing trends

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key takeaways

Key takeaways

Australia’s population is growing at the fastest rate since the 1950s, and 75% of the population lives in the three largest cities.

The density of the population becomes more relevant at a city level.

Melbourne records the highest population density across the capital cities, with Sydney coming in third. This is despite Sydney having a larger portion of medium to high-density housing stock and generally smaller blocks of land.

The rankings of density have changed remarkably over the past 20 years, with Sydney now comprising ‘only’ 13 of the top 20 highest density SA2s, and Melbourne now occupying seven of the top 20, including the top two positions.

The relationship between population density and housing trends is weak. Areas with a high population density have shown slightly stronger rental appreciation over the past 12 months relative to lower population density areas, but slightly weaker growth over the past decade.

The relationship between unit values and population density is more significant over the long term, with high population densities providing virtually no explanatory power for house values over the past 12 months and over the past decade.

Precincts with a high population density tend to show slightly stronger growth in unit rents, but softer rates of capital appreciation across the unit sector, while for houses there is hardly any relationship between population density and trends in rental or value appreciation.

With Australia’s population moving through the fastest rate of growth since the 1950s, our cities and towns are naturally densifying.

At a national level, the population density of 3.5 people per square kilometre (sq. km) is among the lowest in the world, highlighting our highly urbanised population where half the populace lives in the three largest cities.

In fact, 75% of Australia’s population resides on just 2.6% of the land mass.

The density of the population, which is simply the number of residents divided by the land area, becomes more relevant at a city level and even more interesting across smaller areas.

Melbourne records the highest population density across the capital cities

At the capital city level, the highest population density may come as a surprise – it’s not Sydney.

In fact, Sydney comes in third on the population density league table with 441 residents per sq. km.

Melbourne (521 people per sq. km) and Adelaide (444 people per sq. km) both show an overall population density that is higher than Sydney’s.

Summary Of Population Density Over The Past 20 Years

Sydney’s lower population density relative to Melbourne and Adelaide comes despite Sydney having a larger portion of medium to high-density housing stock (units comprise 39.5% of all Sydney dwellings compared with 33.4% in Melbourne), and generally smaller blocks of land (the median land area for houses sold over the past year, at 569sqm was the second lowest of any capital after Perth).

An important factor contributing to the lower population density across Sydney is the larger land area that comprises the metropolitan region.

The Sydney metro area, as defined by the 2021 Greater Capital City Statistical Area (GCCSA) boundary, includes the Central Coast, the Blue Mountains, Penrith and Sutherland covering 12,369 sq. km.

Every capital city is recording a rise in population density

However, the way this is occurring is quite different from region to region.

For example, Perth has recorded the largest increase in population over the past 20 years, with 54.4% more residents, yet it has the highest portion of detached houses of any capital, comprising 85.5% of the housing stock.

Population Density Australian Capitals

Rather than ‘building higher’, Perth has densified via smaller block sizes for detached housing alongside a sprawling urban footprint, where the population has spread to the northern and southern fringes of the city.

A different example of densification can be seen in the ACT, where medium to high-density housing stock has risen from a share of 25.1% of all dwellings 10 years ago to 34.2% in 2024, while the median block size for houses sold over the past 12 months remains among the highest of any capital at 750sqm.

Analysing population density at a geographically granular level reveals inner city precincts of Melbourne and Sydney dominate the highest density locations nationally, however, the rankings of density have changed remarkably over the past 20 years.

In 2003, areas of Sydney comprised 19 of the top 20 SA2s for the highest population density.

Melbourne’s CBD-East was the only non-Sydney area included in the top 20, ranked 17th.

Fast forward to 2023 and the data shows Sydney now comprises ‘only’ 13 of the top 20 highest density SA2s, with Melbourne now occupying seven of the top 20, including the top two positions.

Melbourne’s CBD-North has topped the list for the highest population density in Australia since 2013.

This 0.6 square kilometre area that including the RMIT campus and Victoria Markets, was home to 21,566 residents in 2023, equating to a population density of 38,401 residents per sq. km.

In 2001, this precinct was ranked 187th for population density nationally.

Melbourne’s Southbank-East SA2 region has ranked second for population density since 2019, climbing from a ranking of 113th in 2001.

The Sydney (South)-Haymarket SA2 was ranked third for population density, slipping from a consistent number one ranking between 2009 and 2012, followed by Sydney’s Chippendale and Melbourne CBD-West rounding out the top five regions for population density.

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