100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

Call for broad-based land tax to fix Australia's 'mismatched' housing market

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Push for trial replacing shark nets at main beach

A local council will ask the state government to conduct a trial replacing shark nets with smart drumlines or other non-lethal technologies that allow More

New community garden sprouts on Coast

The Sunshine Coast has a new community garden, providing residents of Meridan Plains a vibrant space to grow vegetables, herbs, flowers and fruit while More

Coast club earns top gongs at national awards

A popular Coast club is celebrating a standout achievement on the national stage after claiming two major titles at the Australian Wedding Industry Awards, More

Man’s body found at popular beach

Police are investigating the sudden death of a man at a popular Sunshine Coast beach this morning. Police received reports about 9.38am of a man More

Police investigate house fire in beachside town

A crime scene has been established after a house fire in a beachside community on the Sunshine Coast. The Queensland Police Service told Sunshine Coast More

‘Devastated’: family rallies around alleged assault victim

A 21-year-old man remains in intensive care after an alleged assault outside a Maroochydore nightclub, with the local community rallying behind his family in More

A property research firm suggests a broad-based land tax could incentivise small households living in big houses to downsize as a way to redress the Aussie housing mismatch.

Aussie couples without kids and people living alone make up the majority of households but property data reveals housing stock is built for bigger families.

Australian households are mostly one or two people but analysis shows the housing stock is dominated by three- and four-bedroom properties.

Couples without kids and people living alone make up 61 per cent of households, raising the question of how well a housing market focused on bigger families is serving real demand.

A comparison between the number of people in a household and data on housing by number of bedrooms shows a stark mismatch, according to the latest analysis from property research firm Cotality.

Research head Eliza Owen said a potential solution could lie in government housing reform.

Couples without kids and people living alone (who make up 61 per cent of households) are contributing to the Aussie housing mismatch. Picture: Shutterstock.

Governments could make it more expensive to have more housing than needed and cheaper for those who opt to live in smaller properties.

Abolishing taxes such as stamp duty could make it cheaper for those to move across different housing and the introduction of a broad-based land tax would raise costs for those who owned more land.

“It’s politically unpopular but has broad consensus among economists that it would help us achieve a more efficient housing market,” Ms Owen said.

The data also highlights the high number of empty-nester households of people aged 65 and over.

Help us deliver more news by registering for our FREE daily news feed. All it requires is your email at the bottom of this article.

“There’s a lot of scope for older Australians to leave their homes to free up homes for younger generations,” Ms Owen said.

“But it’s really hard to implement taxes to encourage people to downsize.

“Things like broad-based land taxes are an incentive for income-poor but asset-rich Australians to downsize.”

Strides are already being taken on the supply side to establish well-located apartments in larger cities to accommodate smaller households, but shifting demand through tax reform could help the take-up of these homes.

“It’s a tough transition to make,” Ms Owen said.

“But it’s also a really hard ask to young families to pay a million dollars to own a house in one of our major cities.”

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share