Falling home prices in major cities could see the end to almost two years of growth

Those looking to buy or rent a new home are increasingly in a stronger position amid declining prices in major markets and forecast for further slides.

A house with a 'For Lease' sign in front of it.

CoreLogic says while house prices increased nationwide in November, the market is showing signs of slowing down. Source: Getty / LisaInGlasses

Almost two years of national home price growth could soon end as mid-sized capitals and mining regions struggle to overcome declines in major cities.

Property data firm CoreLogic recorded a 0.1 per cent rise in November despite downturns gathering momentum in Sydney and Melbourne.

"The mid-sized capitals and most of the regional 'rest of state' markets continue to provide some support for growth in the national index, but it is clear momentum is also leaving these markets," CoreLogic research director Tim Lawless said.

While the average homeowner has lapped up almost 40 per cent of growth since March 2020, helped by an ongoing streak of 22 monthly rises, 2025 appears to be shaping as a buyer's market.

The weakening housing trend was expected to continue until interest rates were cut, CoreLogic said.
Forecasts for that cut slid out towards mid-2025 after core inflation in October remained above the Reserve Bank's target range.

"A lower cash rate will be a positive factor for housing markets," Lawless said.

"A couple of rate cuts might be enough to shore up a declining trend in home values, but it is hard to see any material upward pressure returning until interest rates reduce more substantially and affordability barriers are less formidable."

Selling conditions deteriorated through the traditionally busy spring season with more available supply and less buying activity.

Fewer than three in five auctions across capital cities are resulting in a sale, while private treaty sales are taking longer.

Purchasing activity has fallen sharpest in Sydney, where values contracted 0.2 per cent in November and 0.5 per cent over the quarter.
An auctioneer, wearing a grey suit, points his gavel towards a woman in the crowd during an auction.
An auctioneer congratulates the winning buyers of a house during a live auction in Sydney, where buying activity has fallen sharpest over the quarter. Source: AAP / Mick Tsikas
That's half the speed of Melbourne's falls while small monthly rises in Canberra and Darwin could not erase quarterly falls there too.

Pacesetters Perth and Adelaide are also slowing, with quarterly rises of 3.0 per cent and 2.8 per cent, respectively, the worst in about 18 months.

Mining regions in Western Australia and Queensland have led the charge in the regions, with property values in Mackay, Geraldton and Townsville up at least 6.6 per cent over the quarter.

'The rental boom is over'

Meanwhile, national rents are weakening under the weight of lower population growth, particularly less net overseas migration, and a gradual recovery of average household size.

Rents rose 0.2 per cent in November to be up 5.3 per cent over the past year.

While twice that of the 2010 average, the annual rise is nearly half those in the previous two years.

"Beyond any seasonality, it looks increasingly like the rental boom is over," Lawless said.
"A record low in rental affordability is probably a central reason for the rebound in household size, with high rents likely to be forcing a restructuring of households as renters look for ways to minimise their housing costs," Lawless said.

Soon-to-be enacted reforms in , ban background check fees, and limit rent increases to once a year.

Proposed changes in Victoria would allow tenants to challenge a rent hike based on its size alone.

That's after skyrocketing complaints to Consumer Affairs Victoria and the agency deeming about 1,500 rent rises "excessive" under current laws.

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3 min read
Published 2 December 2024 6:33am
Updated 2 December 2024 10:00am
Source: AAP



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