Australia’s housing market continues to challenge homebuyers, investors, and policymakers alike. Despite various government initiatives to improve affordability, property prices remain high, and many Australians are asking the same question: why is the housing market still so unaffordable? While both political parties propose new schemes to improve access, there’s a growing concern that these policies only increase demand without fixing the core issue—supply.
In this blog, we’ll break down how the imbalance between housing supply and demand is driving up prices and what actually needs to change.
What’s Really Driving Australia’s Housing Market?
Why are house prices rising in Australia despite government policies? The short answer: we’re adding more buyers than homes.
Government incentives like first-home buyer grants and shared equity schemes may help people enter the market, but they do little to fix the underlying issue. In fact, by increasing competition, they tend to inflate prices even more. For example, high net overseas migration—446,000 in 2023–24—adds significant demand (source). Yet, housing supply is failing to keep pace.
According to FutureRent, Australia is currently short around 262,000 homes. The imbalance between how many people need homes and how many are being built is one of the biggest drivers of ongoing price growth. Even a new supply that is approved can take years to materialise. And with construction times growing by 50% since 2014, supply pipelines are slowing even further (source).
What’s the Real Cause of Australia’s Housing Crisis—Demand or Supply?
Demand: Still growing
It’s not that demand doesn’t matter—it does. High migration rates, low interest rates, and lifestyle shifts are all increasing the number of people who want to buy or rent. First-homebuyer schemes and stamp duty concessions also give more people access to credit.
But with strong demand and no matching increase in housing stock, prices will naturally rise. It’s basic economics: more buyers, not enough homes.
Supply: The real bottleneck
The more significant problem is insufficient supply. Australia needs to build at least 240,000 homes per year to meet demand, but is delivering far less. In the first quarter of 2025, housing completions were down significantly, and approval rates have also fallen. (MorningStar)
Several factors are contributing:
- Red tape and slow council approvals
- Rising material and labour costs
- Shortages of skilled tradespeople
All of these issues make it harder and slower to build, limiting the market’s ability to respond to increasing demand.
Why Supply Matters More Than Demand
When the government introduces demand-side initiatives—like shared equity or first-homebuyer support—but doesn’t address supply, it creates a perfect storm. More people have buying power, but the number of homes stays the same. The result? Fierce competition and rising prices. In short, More demand with flat supply equals price hikes
Rent crisis as a downstream effect
This imbalance affects not just buyers, but renters too. Vacancy rates are sitting around 1% nationally, with weekly rents increasing sharply. For instance, The Daily Telegraph reports rent increases of over $17,000/year in some cities since 2020.
Construction delays prolong the crisis
Even when new homes are approved, they’re taking longer to build. On average, home construction now takes around 12.7 months, compared to 8–9 months a decade ago (source).
Check out How Global Trends Shape Australia’s Interest Rates & Loans and see how international events may impact your borrowing power at home.
Are Political Solutions Helping—or Hurting?
Labor’s $10 Billion Housing Australia Future Fund
This initiative aims to build 30,000 social and affordable homes over five years. However, despite being announced nearly three years ago, ABC reports that only a small portion of homes have been contracted, and none have been built yet. Why? Legislative delays, implementation hurdles, and supply chain issues have slowed progress.
Coalition’s alternative approach
The Liberal Party proposes more private-sector involvement and less regulatory red tape. However, critics argue that demand-side incentives are still a major part of their agenda, meaning the pressure on prices may continue unless housing stock increases meaningfully. So far, neither party has aggressively tackled supply—and that’s the root of the problem.
What Actually Needs to Change?
To resolve this housing crisis, both federal and state governments must shift their focus from just boosting demand to fixing supply.
1. Increase housing construction
- Accelerate planning approvals
- Invest in modular and prefabricated homes (already receiving a $54 million commitment from the government)
- Tackle workforce shortages by fast-tracking skills and trade programs (The Guardian)
2. Align demand incentives with real outcomes
Instead of throwing money at demand-side grants, governments need to ensure these policies are supported by actual housing delivery. Social housing targets must be met, not just announced.
3. Structural reform, not short-term fixes
Even the Treasury has warned that the 1.2 million-home target won’t be met without major planning and policy reform (ALP). Without these, supply will keep lagging, and affordability will remain elusive.
Conclusion
The ongoing rise in Australian house prices is less about rising demand and more about inadequate supply. While both demand and supply matter, the supply side is where the crisis truly lies. Demand-driven policies, when not paired with a dramatic boost in new housing, only serve to push prices higher. It’s time policymakers shift from short-term band-aids to long-term structural change.
If you’re affected by the supply and demand issue for Australian housing, connect with LiveInvest’s experts today so you can ask for help!
TL;DR
The key reason why house prices keep rising in Australia is chronic undersupply. Policies that increase demand without boosting housing stock are accelerating price growth. Unless supply issues are addressed through systemic reform, affordability will remain out of reach.
FAQ
Policies are boosting demand, but supply remains far too low.
The core issue is limited supply, not just demand.
More buyers without more homes push prices and rents up.
Not yet. Delays have slowed progress.
Faster construction, policy reform, and supply-focused strategies.
About LiveInvest
LiveInvest is an Australian finance brokerage helping homebuyers and property investors navigate rising house prices with tailored lending solutions. With access to over 50 lenders, they specialise in strategies that support clients in a competitive, supply-constrained housing market.
Learn more at LiveInvest.


