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Brett Warren
By Brett Warren
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Australia’s Housing Crisis Is About to Get Worse – Here’s What You Need to Know

key takeaways

Key takeaways

Australia faces a critical shortage of approximately 400,000 homes by 2029.

Despite ambitious government targets, the shortfall in new home construction is projected to be nearly 393,000 dwellings short of the intended 1.2 million homes in five years.

Only 135,640 new dwellings were completed in capital cities in 2024, just 2.4% higher than 2023.

If you thought the housing shortage was bad now, just wait.

According to the State of the Land Report 2025 released by the Urban Development Institute of Australia (UDIA), we’re staring down the barrel of a staggering 400,000-home shortfall across Australia’s capital cities by 2029.

Let that sink in for a moment.

Despite the Federal Government's ambitious target to build 1.2 million new homes over five years, the UDIA is predicting we’ll fall nearly 393,000 dwellings short.

And for property investors, this isn’t just a headline, it’s a signal of what’s to come.

The supply squeeze is real and getting worse

In 2024, we managed to complete just 135,640 new dwellings across our capital cities, a modest 2.4% bump on the previous year.

That’s hardly a recovery.

While some areas did show signs of life—Greater Perth posted a 22% rise in completions, and Melbourne edged up 7%—those gains were offset by falling numbers in Sydney (down 4%), Adelaide (down 6%) and Canberra (down a concerning 16%).

Looking ahead, it gets worse before it gets better.

UDIA is forecasting an 11% drop in new home completions in 2025, down to just 120,660 homes.

And by 2026, the number is expected to fall further to 116,700.

It’s only by the end of the decade that we see a modest uptick, with completions barely nudging back to around 125,000 homes by 2029, still well short of what’s needed.

And remember, this shortfall isn’t just about numbers, it’s about people.

Fewer homes mean more pressure on renters, continued erosion of housing affordability, and a growing divide between those who own property and those who may never get the chance.

What’s going wrong?

There are a few key factors at play here and none of them are new:

  • Zoning and planning bottlenecks continue to stifle greenfield and infill development.

  • Construction industry capacity constraints, from labour shortages to material costs, are slowing progress.

  • And perhaps most significantly, bureaucratic inertia and short-term thinking from all levels of government are holding us back from making the big, bold changes we need.

The report highlights that while greenfield lot sales did improve by 25% in 2024 across capital cities, this recovery is coming off a very low base.

Sales are still 52% below the 2021 peak, and Melbourne—the nation’s largest housing market—is dragging the chain with “extremely weak performance.”

Lot prices, meanwhile, surged 13% nationally to a median of $421,525—double the average annual price growth of the past decade.

That growth was driven by stronger markets like South East Queensland, Adelaide, and Perth, where both demand and delivery were more resilient.

Population growth vs. housing supply: a growing mismatch

Australia’s population grew by 552,000 people in FY24, roughly double the long-run average, driven largely by immigration.

And while that’s a good sign for long-term economic growth, it’s a serious concern for housing.

Because the housing supply hasn’t even come close to keeping up.

UDIA points to the period between 2007 and 2014 as a critical time when underbuilding laid the groundwork for today’s rental crisis.

This chronic undersupply has compounded over time, eroding affordability, driving up household debt, and pushing homeownership out of reach for many Australians.

What’s the solution?

Let’s be clear: the solution is not to simply “build more houses.”

That’s the destination, but we need a much more strategic approach to get there.

Here’s what I believe needs to happen:

  1. Unlock development-ready land
    Fast-tracking rezoning and removing planning bottlenecks is essential. But not just any land—we need land in the right locations, close to infrastructure, jobs, and transport.

  2. Incentivise the delivery of medium-density housing
    We can’t keep sprawling out forever. Townhouses, duplexes, and low-rise apartments offer a “missing middle” solution that suits many modern households.

  3. Support the construction sector
    With the industry still struggling under rising costs and capacity issues, targeted support and regulatory streamlining can help developers bring projects to market faster.

  4. Promote long-term certainty in policy and planning
    Investors and developers need confidence to commit to large-scale projects. That means fewer reactive policy changes and more long-term vision and collaboration across government.

  5. Facilitate private sector involvement in affordable and social housing
    The government can’t do it alone. Private sector partnerships, backed by the right incentives and frameworks, are key to scaling up the supply of non-market housing.

Final thoughts

We’ve underdelivered for decades.

And unless we treat the housing supply like the national emergency it is, we’re setting ourselves up for another decade of worsening affordability, increasing inequality, and declining homeownership.

The UDIA report is grim, but it’s also a wake-up call.

If we act now, with urgency, coordination, and long-term thinking, we can start to close the gap.

But make no mistake: the clock is ticking, and the cost of inaction is only rising.

Brett Warren
About Brett Warren Brett Warren is National Director of Metropole Properties and uses his two decades of property investment experience to advise clients how to grow, protect and pass on their wealth through strategic property advice.
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