Since the expanded scheme started, home value growth has eased in most markets.
Over last year, house values grew fastest in Darwin, at 19.9 per cent, while units in the city lifted by 17 per cent. Brisbane (14 per cent) and Perth (15.7 per cent) both experienced double-digit growth in house values.
Sydney’s house values lifted by 6.9 per cent last year, while Melbourne recorded the national low, at 5.4 per cent.
For 2025, Cotality’s measure of national median dwelling value grew by 8.6 per cent or $71,400.
It was the strongest calendar year since 2021, when values jumped by 24.5 per cent, which was the biggest annual increase in a generation.
Loading
In the nation’s capitals, particular suburbs outperformed.
The largest single increase in the country was in the Darwin area of Palmerston, where values jumped by 26.3 per cent.
Other large increases were recorded in the Perth inner-east suburban area covering Belmont and Victoria Park (up by 20 per cent); the southern Brisbane suburbs of Springwood and Kingston (19.5 per cent); and the south-east Melbourne suburb of Frankston (14.3 per cent).
The smallest increases were recorded in suburban Canberra, where an apartment building boom has lifted local supply.
Regional parts of Australia continued to record sharper value increases. The largest was in Albany, in south-west Western Australia, where values lifted by 23.7 per cent to $741,348.
In the north-west Victorian border city of Mildura, values lifted by 19.2 per cent, while across Queensland’s Granite Belt values grew by 20.4 per cent.
While values continue to rise, there are some signs of relief for the nation’s property market. Cotality noted that the rental vacancy rate increased marginally to 1.6 per cent, although it remained where it was at the start of 2025.
Cotality’s measure of rents increased by 0.3 per cent last month after rising by 0.5 per cent in November. Darwin recorded the largest annual increase in rents on houses, at 7.6 per cent, while, for units, rents climbed fastest in Hobart, at 9.3 per cent.
The smallest increases were in the two cities with the largest rise in supply during the year. Rents lifted by 2.9 per cent in Melbourne while they were up 3 per cent in Canberra.
Lawless, the Cotality research director, cautioned that rents, which have been one of the driving forces of Australia’s inflation rate over the past four years, would continue to climb.
“We will get a better feel for rental conditions in February. However, even if conditions have loosened a little, it’s from an extremely tight position, and rents are likely to rise further through 2026,” he said.
December’s monthly inflation figures to be released next week will give some insight into whether price pressures are continuing to build in a development that could result in the Reserve Bank lifting official interest rates at its first meeting for the year, in early February.
Financial markets put the chance of a rate rise next month at 30 per cent but fully expect the RBA to have taken the cash rate to 3.85 per cent by August.
Start the day with a summary of the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up for our Morning Edition newsletter.