“Hobart had the largest increase in the median price for both houses at 5.2 per cent and for other dwellings at 4.8 per cent,” he said.
Over the quarter, median rents for three-bedroom houses increased or remained steady in all capital cities, with Hobart at 2.7 per cent having the largest increase. Median rents for two-bedroom other dwellings were variable among the capital cities.
The median rent increased in Hobart at 3.2 per cent, remained steady in Melbourne and Brisbane but decreased in Sydney, Adelaide, Perth, Darwin and Canberra. Perth had the largest decrease at 4.7 per cent.
“The weighted average vacancy rate for the eight capital cities remained steady on 2.8 per cent during the December quarter 2017,” Mr Gunning said.
“Vacancy rates decreased in most capital cities including Melbourne, Perth, Canberra, Hobart and Darwin, with the largest decreases of 0.6 percentage points in Canberra and Darwin.
“Vacancy rates increased in Sydney and Brisbane, while only Perth and Darwin had vacancy rates above the industry benchmark of 3.0 per cent,” Mr Gunning concluded.
See the results in full here if you are a REINSW member.