
The average home is now worth $1 million. This boom is blowing up in a bad way
The nation's home owners would have been pleased by recent news from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) that the national mean price of residential dwellings had risen to $1,002,500, the first time it has passed the million-dollar mark.
Of course, that level was exceeded long ago in many city suburbs, with prices in regional areas also going sky-high as sea and tree changers took real estate windfalls and relocated.
Around 66 per cent of Australian households own their own home with or without a mortgage. Home ownership, with a consistent rise in values, is Australians' most important asset, along with superannuation, which ticks over in the background, accessible only in later years.
Renters, numbering one-third of Australian households, have also experienced the impacts of the ongoing property boom, except not in a good way.
They are mostly dependent on the one-in-five households that own residential properties other than their usual domicile.
For the record, one in 25 of these owners has four or more properties.
Yet very few are affordable to low-income earners.
Anglicare Australia's 2025 Rental Affordability Snapshot surveyed 51,238 rental listings across Australia and found that just 352 rentals (0.7 per cent) were affordable for a person earning a full-time minimum wage.
Almost none was affordable for a person on JobSeeker wanting a room in a share house, and none for a person on Youth Allowance.
Median advertised rents have risen 35 per cent since this government came to office, more than three times the rise in wages.
Another recent report, Rights at risk: Rising rents and repercussions, by ACOSS and the University of NSW, carries further alarming findings. Almost seven in 10 people who rent privately worry about asking for repairs in case they face a rent increase, with 56 per cent fearing it would lead to eviction and 52 per cent fearing being placed on a blacklist that would prevent them renting another property.
Half of all renters live in homes that need repairs, one in 10 urgently.
Almost one-in-five bathrooms has mould, which is a major health risk. Some 82 per cent of renters would find a 5 per cent rent hike "difficult or very difficult".
A significant problem, and a major eyesore, is that many potential rentals are left empty - around a million Australia-wide. If occupied, these so-called "speculative vacancies" could greatly assist would-be renters.
St Vincent de Paul Society calls for taxation reform to incentivise the use of long-term vacant residential properties and land.
Homes that are rented have the added benefit (to owners) of generous tax concessions, both during ownership and at point of sale.
This creates a considerable loss to the Treasury, with the Parliamentary Budget Office calculating that tax revenue foregone over the decade to 2034-35 due to negative gearing deductions and the capital gains tax (CGT) discount on residential investment properties will total a massive $165 billion.
This is money lost to healthcare, education, housing and other social essentials.
St Vincent de Paul Society regards housing as a basic human right and we firmly believe all Australians deserve a secure place to live. Properties should be treated primarily as homes, not investment opportunities.
The Society supports reducing CGT concessions from 50 per cent to 37.5 per cent to generate revenue that could be used to improve social services, plus a review of negative gearing.
The government should increase needs-based funding of homelessness services and permanent supportive housing, including client-led support services.
If not now, when?
The last census recorded 122,494 people experiencing homelessness, and that was four years ago.
Governments should fund and perhaps mandate policies that improve energy efficiency in low-income households, including apartment buildings.
This goes hand in hand with funding and legislating national minimum standards for renters. The package known as "A Better Deal for Renters" was endorsed by national cabinet in 2023 with the promise that, "These changes will make a tangible impact for the almost one-third of Australian households who rent".
The plan is yet to be fully implemented.
Meanwhile, rent increases have accelerated, and pests are the most common tenant complaint, affecting one-third of premises.
We're urging for a compassionate review of the base rate of working-age payments to lift recipients above the poverty line. So many people simply cannot afford decent housing.
Achieving this basic goal is fundamental to Australia's future and for our much-prized social harmony.
As the Human Rights Law Centre puts it, "every person should have a safe, secure and healthy place to call home, regardless of your postcode or bank balance. Yet too many Australians are homeless, live in inadequate, insecure or unsafe housing, or need to sacrifice other necessities - from food to school uniforms - to keep a roof over their heads."
Our members see these challenges every day, and while we can offer assistance within our means, structural change to the national housing market is needed urgently.
More than two decades ago, former prime minister John Howard said, "I don't get people stopping me in the street and saying, 'John you're outrageous, under your government the value of my house has increased".'
The nation's home owners would have been pleased by recent news from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) that the national mean price of residential dwellings had risen to $1,002,500, the first time it has passed the million-dollar mark.
Of course, that level was exceeded long ago in many city suburbs, with prices in regional areas also going sky-high as sea and tree changers took real estate windfalls and relocated.
Around 66 per cent of Australian households own their own home with or without a mortgage. Home ownership, with a consistent rise in values, is Australians' most important asset, along with superannuation, which ticks over in the background, accessible only in later years.
Renters, numbering one-third of Australian households, have also experienced the impacts of the ongoing property boom, except not in a good way.
They are mostly dependent on the one-in-five households that own residential properties other than their usual domicile.
For the record, one in 25 of these owners has four or more properties.
Yet very few are affordable to low-income earners.
Anglicare Australia's 2025 Rental Affordability Snapshot surveyed 51,238 rental listings across Australia and found that just 352 rentals (0.7 per cent) were affordable for a person earning a full-time minimum wage.
Almost none was affordable for a person on JobSeeker wanting a room in a share house, and none for a person on Youth Allowance.
Median advertised rents have risen 35 per cent since this government came to office, more than three times the rise in wages.
Another recent report, Rights at risk: Rising rents and repercussions, by ACOSS and the University of NSW, carries further alarming findings. Almost seven in 10 people who rent privately worry about asking for repairs in case they face a rent increase, with 56 per cent fearing it would lead to eviction and 52 per cent fearing being placed on a blacklist that would prevent them renting another property.
Half of all renters live in homes that need repairs, one in 10 urgently.
Almost one-in-five bathrooms has mould, which is a major health risk. Some 82 per cent of renters would find a 5 per cent rent hike "difficult or very difficult".
A significant problem, and a major eyesore, is that many potential rentals are left empty - around a million Australia-wide. If occupied, these so-called "speculative vacancies" could greatly assist would-be renters.
St Vincent de Paul Society calls for taxation reform to incentivise the use of long-term vacant residential properties and land.
Homes that are rented have the added benefit (to owners) of generous tax concessions, both during ownership and at point of sale.
This creates a considerable loss to the Treasury, with the Parliamentary Budget Office calculating that tax revenue foregone over the decade to 2034-35 due to negative gearing deductions and the capital gains tax (CGT) discount on residential investment properties will total a massive $165 billion.
This is money lost to healthcare, education, housing and other social essentials.
St Vincent de Paul Society regards housing as a basic human right and we firmly believe all Australians deserve a secure place to live. Properties should be treated primarily as homes, not investment opportunities.
The Society supports reducing CGT concessions from 50 per cent to 37.5 per cent to generate revenue that could be used to improve social services, plus a review of negative gearing.
The government should increase needs-based funding of homelessness services and permanent supportive housing, including client-led support services.
If not now, when?
The last census recorded 122,494 people experiencing homelessness, and that was four years ago.
Governments should fund and perhaps mandate policies that improve energy efficiency in low-income households, including apartment buildings.
This goes hand in hand with funding and legislating national minimum standards for renters. The package known as "A Better Deal for Renters" was endorsed by national cabinet in 2023 with the promise that, "These changes will make a tangible impact for the almost one-third of Australian households who rent".
The plan is yet to be fully implemented.
Meanwhile, rent increases have accelerated, and pests are the most common tenant complaint, affecting one-third of premises.
We're urging for a compassionate review of the base rate of working-age payments to lift recipients above the poverty line. So many people simply cannot afford decent housing.
Achieving this basic goal is fundamental to Australia's future and for our much-prized social harmony.
As the Human Rights Law Centre puts it, "every person should have a safe, secure and healthy place to call home, regardless of your postcode or bank balance. Yet too many Australians are homeless, live in inadequate, insecure or unsafe housing, or need to sacrifice other necessities - from food to school uniforms - to keep a roof over their heads."
Our members see these challenges every day, and while we can offer assistance within our means, structural change to the national housing market is needed urgently.
More than two decades ago, former prime minister John Howard said, "I don't get people stopping me in the street and saying, 'John you're outrageous, under your government the value of my house has increased".'
The nation's home owners would have been pleased by recent news from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) that the national mean price of residential dwellings had risen to $1,002,500, the first time it has passed the million-dollar mark.
Of course, that level was exceeded long ago in many city suburbs, with prices in regional areas also going sky-high as sea and tree changers took real estate windfalls and relocated.
Around 66 per cent of Australian households own their own home with or without a mortgage. Home ownership, with a consistent rise in values, is Australians' most important asset, along with superannuation, which ticks over in the background, accessible only in later years.
Renters, numbering one-third of Australian households, have also experienced the impacts of the ongoing property boom, except not in a good way.
They are mostly dependent on the one-in-five households that own residential properties other than their usual domicile.
For the record, one in 25 of these owners has four or more properties.
Yet very few are affordable to low-income earners.
Anglicare Australia's 2025 Rental Affordability Snapshot surveyed 51,238 rental listings across Australia and found that just 352 rentals (0.7 per cent) were affordable for a person earning a full-time minimum wage.
Almost none was affordable for a person on JobSeeker wanting a room in a share house, and none for a person on Youth Allowance.
Median advertised rents have risen 35 per cent since this government came to office, more than three times the rise in wages.
Another recent report, Rights at risk: Rising rents and repercussions, by ACOSS and the University of NSW, carries further alarming findings. Almost seven in 10 people who rent privately worry about asking for repairs in case they face a rent increase, with 56 per cent fearing it would lead to eviction and 52 per cent fearing being placed on a blacklist that would prevent them renting another property.
Half of all renters live in homes that need repairs, one in 10 urgently.
Almost one-in-five bathrooms has mould, which is a major health risk. Some 82 per cent of renters would find a 5 per cent rent hike "difficult or very difficult".
A significant problem, and a major eyesore, is that many potential rentals are left empty - around a million Australia-wide. If occupied, these so-called "speculative vacancies" could greatly assist would-be renters.
St Vincent de Paul Society calls for taxation reform to incentivise the use of long-term vacant residential properties and land.
Homes that are rented have the added benefit (to owners) of generous tax concessions, both during ownership and at point of sale.
This creates a considerable loss to the Treasury, with the Parliamentary Budget Office calculating that tax revenue foregone over the decade to 2034-35 due to negative gearing deductions and the capital gains tax (CGT) discount on residential investment properties will total a massive $165 billion.
This is money lost to healthcare, education, housing and other social essentials.
St Vincent de Paul Society regards housing as a basic human right and we firmly believe all Australians deserve a secure place to live. Properties should be treated primarily as homes, not investment opportunities.
The Society supports reducing CGT concessions from 50 per cent to 37.5 per cent to generate revenue that could be used to improve social services, plus a review of negative gearing.
The government should increase needs-based funding of homelessness services and permanent supportive housing, including client-led support services.
If not now, when?
The last census recorded 122,494 people experiencing homelessness, and that was four years ago.
Governments should fund and perhaps mandate policies that improve energy efficiency in low-income households, including apartment buildings.
This goes hand in hand with funding and legislating national minimum standards for renters. The package known as "A Better Deal for Renters" was endorsed by national cabinet in 2023 with the promise that, "These changes will make a tangible impact for the almost one-third of Australian households who rent".
The plan is yet to be fully implemented.
Meanwhile, rent increases have accelerated, and pests are the most common tenant complaint, affecting one-third of premises.
We're urging for a compassionate review of the base rate of working-age payments to lift recipients above the poverty line. So many people simply cannot afford decent housing.
Achieving this basic goal is fundamental to Australia's future and for our much-prized social harmony.
As the Human Rights Law Centre puts it, "every person should have a safe, secure and healthy place to call home, regardless of your postcode or bank balance. Yet too many Australians are homeless, live in inadequate, insecure or unsafe housing, or need to sacrifice other necessities - from food to school uniforms - to keep a roof over their heads."
Our members see these challenges every day, and while we can offer assistance within our means, structural change to the national housing market is needed urgently.
More than two decades ago, former prime minister John Howard said, "I don't get people stopping me in the street and saying, 'John you're outrageous, under your government the value of my house has increased".'
The nation's home owners would have been pleased by recent news from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) that the national mean price of residential dwellings had risen to $1,002,500, the first time it has passed the million-dollar mark.
Of course, that level was exceeded long ago in many city suburbs, with prices in regional areas also going sky-high as sea and tree changers took real estate windfalls and relocated.
Around 66 per cent of Australian households own their own home with or without a mortgage. Home ownership, with a consistent rise in values, is Australians' most important asset, along with superannuation, which ticks over in the background, accessible only in later years.
Renters, numbering one-third of Australian households, have also experienced the impacts of the ongoing property boom, except not in a good way.
They are mostly dependent on the one-in-five households that own residential properties other than their usual domicile.
For the record, one in 25 of these owners has four or more properties.
Yet very few are affordable to low-income earners.
Anglicare Australia's 2025 Rental Affordability Snapshot surveyed 51,238 rental listings across Australia and found that just 352 rentals (0.7 per cent) were affordable for a person earning a full-time minimum wage.
Almost none was affordable for a person on JobSeeker wanting a room in a share house, and none for a person on Youth Allowance.
Median advertised rents have risen 35 per cent since this government came to office, more than three times the rise in wages.
Another recent report, Rights at risk: Rising rents and repercussions, by ACOSS and the University of NSW, carries further alarming findings. Almost seven in 10 people who rent privately worry about asking for repairs in case they face a rent increase, with 56 per cent fearing it would lead to eviction and 52 per cent fearing being placed on a blacklist that would prevent them renting another property.
Half of all renters live in homes that need repairs, one in 10 urgently.
Almost one-in-five bathrooms has mould, which is a major health risk. Some 82 per cent of renters would find a 5 per cent rent hike "difficult or very difficult".
A significant problem, and a major eyesore, is that many potential rentals are left empty - around a million Australia-wide. If occupied, these so-called "speculative vacancies" could greatly assist would-be renters.
St Vincent de Paul Society calls for taxation reform to incentivise the use of long-term vacant residential properties and land.
Homes that are rented have the added benefit (to owners) of generous tax concessions, both during ownership and at point of sale.
This creates a considerable loss to the Treasury, with the Parliamentary Budget Office calculating that tax revenue foregone over the decade to 2034-35 due to negative gearing deductions and the capital gains tax (CGT) discount on residential investment properties will total a massive $165 billion.
This is money lost to healthcare, education, housing and other social essentials.
St Vincent de Paul Society regards housing as a basic human right and we firmly believe all Australians deserve a secure place to live. Properties should be treated primarily as homes, not investment opportunities.
The Society supports reducing CGT concessions from 50 per cent to 37.5 per cent to generate revenue that could be used to improve social services, plus a review of negative gearing.
The government should increase needs-based funding of homelessness services and permanent supportive housing, including client-led support services.
If not now, when?
The last census recorded 122,494 people experiencing homelessness, and that was four years ago.
Governments should fund and perhaps mandate policies that improve energy efficiency in low-income households, including apartment buildings.
This goes hand in hand with funding and legislating national minimum standards for renters. The package known as "A Better Deal for Renters" was endorsed by national cabinet in 2023 with the promise that, "These changes will make a tangible impact for the almost one-third of Australian households who rent".
The plan is yet to be fully implemented.
Meanwhile, rent increases have accelerated, and pests are the most common tenant complaint, affecting one-third of premises.
We're urging for a compassionate review of the base rate of working-age payments to lift recipients above the poverty line. So many people simply cannot afford decent housing.
Achieving this basic goal is fundamental to Australia's future and for our much-prized social harmony.
As the Human Rights Law Centre puts it, "every person should have a safe, secure and healthy place to call home, regardless of your postcode or bank balance. Yet too many Australians are homeless, live in inadequate, insecure or unsafe housing, or need to sacrifice other necessities - from food to school uniforms - to keep a roof over their heads."
Our members see these challenges every day, and while we can offer assistance within our means, structural change to the national housing market is needed urgently.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sky News AU
2 hours ago
- Sky News AU
2 July
Ooops, an error has occurred! Please call us on 1800 070 535 and we'll help resolve the issue or try again later. The Streaming Subscription provides Australians access to top rating opinion shows, award-winning political coverage, live breaking news, sport and weather, expert business insights and groundbreaking documentaries across four dedicated news channels for $5 a month. This includes: Sky News – Australia's news channel featuring award-winning journalists, insights from the biggest names in opinion, ground-breaking special investigations, and live breaking news, sport and weather. Available live and on-demand. Sky News Extra – A dedicated 24/7 channel featuring live press conferences and Parliament broadcasts, with unfiltered access to Australian democracy in action. Available live. Sky News Weather – Australia's only 24/7 weather channel bringing you the latest weather forecasts from the country's largest team of meteorologists. Available live. FOX SPORTS News – Australia's only 24/7 sports news channel, first and live in breaking sports news. Available live. Stream Sky News channel shows in full live and on-demand on or the Sky News Australia app and cast to your compatible TV. For the best streaming experience, stream your favourite Sky News shows on your compatible Smart TV. For a step-by-step guide on how to sign in on your Smart TV or to find out if your Smart TV is compatible, visit our help page. There is no lock-in contract when you subscribe to a Streaming Subscription. Renewals occur automatically unless cancelled as per full Terms and Conditions . The Streaming Subscription is not available outside of Australia. If overseas (excluding New Zealand), you can access your favourite Sky News Australia programs by signing up to Australia Channel. Sky News Australia's international 24/7 news streaming service. Find out more here. You can continue to access digital-only content, video highlights, and listen to the latest podcasts without a subscription on our website and app. The Streaming Subscription gives subscribers live stream access to unrivalled news and opinion content across four dedicated news channels 24/7.

Sky News AU
2 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Allan government leading Australia down a ‘race-dividing road'
Sky News host Steve Price slams Victoria's Allan government for attempting to 'divide' Australians. 'I mentioned this treaty process being foisted on Victorians by a hard left Labor state government earlier in the week. Well, we now have a lot more detail and it's a whole lot worse than any of us realised, me included,' Mr Price said. 'Put simply, a standing royal commission paid for by Victorian taxpayers to the tune of $65 million so far has sat for four years. This thing is called the Yoorrook Justice Commission and has handed down to Parliament its final report, it's got 100 recommendations and they expect to be ticked off by the Parliament. 'It's a race-dividing road we should not be going down, but sadly, we are already well down that road.'


Perth Now
4 hours ago
- Perth Now
Kanye West visa cancelled by Australian government
Kanye West's Australian visa has been cancelled over his "offensive comments". The 48-year-old rapper - whose wife Bianca Censori has family Down Under - had a "lower-level" visa which has now been revoked after he release antisemitic song Heil Hitler in May. The country's Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke told ABC: "He's been coming to Australia for a long time. "He's got family here and he's made a lot of offensive comments that my officials looked at again. "Once he released the Heil Hitler song, he no longer has a valid visa in Australia. "It wasn't a visa for the purpose of concerts. It was a lower-level and the officials still looked at the law and said, you're going to have a song and promote that sort of Nazism, we don't need that in Australia." Earlier this year, the Stronger rapper came under fire over his controversial behaviour, including praising Adolf Hitler and selling t-shirts emblazoned with a Swastika, a notorious Nazi hate symbol. However, in May he asked for forgiveness and called for peace. He wrote in a series of posts on X: "I am done with antisemitism. I love all people. "God forgive me for the pain I've caused. "I forgive those who have caused me pain. Thank you God. "The earth itself is in Gods Kingdom. "GOD CALLS FOR PEACE. "Share peace. "Share love." Kanye claimed his outlook changed after he enjoyed a video call with his and ex-wife Kim Kardashian's four children, North, 11, Saint, nine, Chicago, seven, and six-year-old Psalm. He wrote: "I simply got a FaceTime from my kids and I wanna save the world again." This isn't the first time Kanye has seemingly had a change of heart as in February, he declared he was "not a Nazi" following "further reflection. Taking to X, he wrote: "After further reflection I've come to the realization that I'm not a Nazi." Kanye had previously declared his anti-Semitic comments to be "90 percent Jew proof", as he went on to explain he meant no one had been able to "stop" him. He wrote: "I will write this more poetically in a bit cause right now I'm finishing my verse for Game's album. "The idea of being Jew proof is "I said all these politically incorrect things and nobody was able to stop me extort me threaten me to change anything "And I made 40 million the next day between my different business "There's a lot of Jewish people I know and love and still work with "The point I made and showed is that I am not under Jewish control anymore (sic)"