Australian buyers are tracking a notable milestone in the housing market, with the latest data indicating four major capitals now report median values above the $1 million threshold. The emergence of a growing million-dollar house club reflects persistent demand and ongoing tight supply in Australia’s capital cities, where competition for well-located homes remains fierce and lending conditions continue to shape buying power. While regional markets move on their own trajectory, the trend in the capitals signals a new facet of affordability that policymakers, lenders and buyers will be watching closely.
What we know
- The four capitals have median values that sit above the $1 million mark in the current data, marking a first for multiple metros.
- Demand remains firm among owner-occupiers and investors alike, helping to push prices higher despite tighter listings.
- Supply is constrained with fewer properties entering the market relative to demand, continuing a pattern that supports price growth.
- Price gains are broad-based, spanning central corridors and fringe suburbs within the capitals, not limited to a single area or property type.
- Financing conditions and borrowing power are shaping buyers’ activity, with rate environments and lending criteria influencing who can participate.
There is a growing acknowledgement that what is occurring in the capitals may have a flow-on effect for other parts of the market. Analysts emphasise that while the dollar milestone matters, it is not a singular predictor of affordability, given the mix of incomes, loan products and local supply dynamics that vary city by city.
What we don’t know
- Normalisation vs. anomaly – whether the $1 million median threshold becomes routine across more capitals or remains a selective milestone.
- Drivers vs. composition – how much of the rise reflects price growth versus a shift in the mix of homes on the market (eg more high-value listings entering the pool).
- Future supply pipeline – what planned developments and approvals will mean for stock levels over the next 12–24 months.
- Impact on renters and first-time buyers – whether higher valuations translate into tighter rental markets or delayed entry for prospective buyers.
As data continues to evolve, the market outlook will hinge on a balance of demand, supply and policy signals. For now, buyers and sellers are advised to monitor local conditions, including listing activity, days-on-market and lending criteria, as the year unfolds.
