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Regional markets lag capitals’ rent and value growth

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After recording stronger growth and milder declines through the recent cycles, a new analysis of Australia’s regional housing markets shows many areas have lagged their capital city counterparts over the past year.

CoreLogic’s refreshed Quarterly Regional Market Update, which now analyses value and rent changes across the country’s largest 50 non-capital Significant Urban Areas (SUAs), shows rising interest rates, higher cost of living pressures and normalising internal migration patterns appear to have hit the regions harder.

Values Best And Worst Performers

Since bottoming out in January, values across the combined capitals have risen to new record highs, while the combined regional market remains -2.5% below the peak recorded in May 2022.

Results across Australia’s largest 50 non-capital SUAs vary, with 12 (8 in QLD, 2 in NSW and 2 in WA) recording new peaks in October, and an additional four sitting within 1% of their previous record highs.

Looking at quarterly value growth, WA’s Bunbury recorded the strongest rise, up 4.6% over the three months to October, followed by NSW’s Lismore, and St Georges Basin – Sanctuary Point, up 4.3% and 3.9% respectively.

Despite not taking out the top spot, NSW and Queensland were undeniably the best-performing states, each making up four of the top 10 positions in terms of quarterly value growth.

Queensland also made up half of the top 10 for annual value growth, with Bundaberg and SA’s Mount Gambier both recording annual growth above 10%.

In contrast, regional Victoria saw some of the largest quarterly declines, with dwelling values across Warrnambool and Ballarat falling -1.6% and -1.5%, respectively, while the coastal town of Batemans Bay in New South Wales (-6.9%) recorded the largest annual decrease.

These markets are now seeing weaker growth conditions after strong gains during the pandemic upswing.

Regional rental markets

Similar to values, growth in regional rents has lagged the capitals.

Rents Best And Worst Performers

Fuelled by strong net overseas migration, smaller household sizes and limited stock, the combined capitals has seen rents rise 1.8% over the past three months.

In contrast, normalising migration patterns have seen regional rents record a milder 0.8% rise.

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