Posted In:

The Australian Financial Review

Australia will deliver 30,000 fewer apartments this year than previously expected as developers hold off on projects they couldn’t sell profitably and weak presales and weather delay construction, CBRE says in a new report.

The number of new apartment completions will drop from 64,031 last calendar year to 52,505 – well below the 81,880 homes the commercial real estate agency forecast two years ago.

“It’s because feasibilities didn’t stack up a year or two ago and projects are running slightly behind schedule,” CBRE head of Pacific research Sameer Chopra told The Australian Financial Review.

Including the expected decline next year, new completions over the five years to 2030 were likely to be down 50,000 from 2023 forecast, reflecting in large part the disparity between build cost and sale price, Chopra said.

“Even now, feasibilities are still about 20 per cent under water,” he said.

Visit the Australian Financial Review to read the full article.

Related posts

  • Fuel crisis threatens housing affordability

    Opinion Editorial, Published in The West Australian Newspaper, Wednesday 22 April 2026 Terms like ‘unprecedented’ and ‘global uncertainty’ became part of everyday language during the pandemic. Just as the development and construction industry was finding…

    Read more

  • Sand no longer dirt cheap

    The West Australian, Page 3, Saturday 18 April 2026 WA’s identity as the Sandgroper State may have been forged in its coastal plains but sand is no longer dirt cheap with costs jumping two-thirds —…

    Read more

  • Saffioti flags more housing budget measures

    Business News Rita Saffioti has signalled a potential expansion of the first home buyers’ grant, while reassuring developers connections to infrastructure should improve. Speaking at an Urban Development Institute of Australia WA event today, the…

    Read more