This article was first published by Scott Carbines via news.com.au on 2o Oct 2017.
MELBOURNE’s median house price increased by its lowest quarterly amount in almost two years in a positive sign for first-home buyers.
A flood of sales at the affordable end of the market moderated growth to just 0.7 per cent in the September quarter, according to the Real Estate Institute of Victoria, which recorded a citywide median of $817,000.
Vendors in some of Melbourne’s traditional battler suburbs have received a boost from the rush for affordable properties.
Sunbury (14.5 per cent), Lalor (12.8 per cent) and Broadmeadows (9.7 per cent) were among Melbourne’s top 10 for median house price growth in the September quarter.
Dromana (15 per cent), Balwyn North (13.8 per cent) and Ringwood East (13.2 per cent) were other top performers.
REIV acting president Richard Simpson said 44 per cent of sales during the three month period were below $600,000.
This is the cut off point for the full first-home buyer stamp duty concession introduced by the State Government in July.
“These incentives have certainly worked, with first-home buyers accounting for 18.3 per cent of all new home loans in August — the highest since September 2013,” Mr Simpson said.
“Despite the moderation, the market remains strong with the Melbourne median house price up a remarkable 14 per cent on the same period last year.
“We’re also seeing buyer demand continue to outstrip supply and a high level of vendor confidence.”
Leading Real Estate agent Adam Sacco said Sunbury houses were selling in just a few days with “seven out of 10 buyers” coming from out of area.
“There’s a $150,000 difference compared with the surrounding suburbs’ median price to Sunbury,” he said.
Jason and Jacqui Delaney’s three-bedroom Birkdale Court, Sunbury, home fetched $476,000 — about $40,000 more than the agent’s expectations — after seven offers at the first open for inspection.
Mr Delaney said the family “couldn’t be happier” at the quick result.
Advantage Property Consulting director Frank Valentic said tougher lending conditions for investors had also helped cool the Melbourne market and give first-home buyers an edge.
“First-home buyers are definitely getting a bit more opportunity now because investors have dropped off, and first-home buyers have picked up that slack under $750,000,” he said.
Melbourne’s median apartment price fell for the first time in six quarters, down 2.5 per cent to $587,000. House prices in regional Victoria increased for the third consecutive quarter, up 1.2 per cent to $385,000.
TOP GROWTH SUBURBS — SEPTEMBER QUARTER
Dromana, 15 per cent to $790,250
Sunbury, 14.5 per cent to $518,000
Balwyn North, 13.8 per cent to $2.105 million
Ringwood East, 13.2 per cent to $1.03 million
Lalor, 12.8 per cent to $682,500
Diamond Creek, 11.9 per cent to $813,100
Bentleigh, 11.8 per cent to $1.61 million
Richmond, 10.8 per cent to $1.442 million
Eltham, 9.8 per cent to $945,000
Broadmeadows, 9.7 per cent to $595,000
Source: Real Estate Institute of Victoria (minimum 30 sales)