Two Forces Just Hit the Australian Housing Market — Here’s What They Mean for Brisbane Buyers

Two forces have just collided in the Australian property market — and most people haven’t noticed yet.

While the headlines have been dominated by geopolitical tensions and interest rate speculation, two structural shifts are quietly reshaping the outlook for housing in 2026 and beyond. Understanding them could make the difference between a well-timed decision and an expensive one.

Force One: Construction Costs Are Rising Again

What’s happening in global energy markets is no longer abstract. It’s showing up in invoices.

Building companies across Australia are already locking in price surcharges across core raw materials. Piping prices have increased by 36% — with an additional 10% regional delivery fee on top. Steel products used in residential construction have risen by up to 15% in a matter of weeks, with warnings of a further 10% increase. Freight costs for key construction inputs have jumped 20–30%.

This is inflation at the foundation level — and it flows through the entire system.

When oil prices spike, fuel costs rise. When fuel costs rise, transport rises. When transport rises, raw material prices follow. And eventually, the cost of building a home rises with it.

The counterargument — that buyers simply won’t pay more — sounds logical but misses how housing markets actually work. When supply is already constrained, a developer facing rising costs doesn’t absorb the loss. They either pass it on through the final price, or they shelve the project entirely.

Both outcomes point in the same direction: upward pressure on prices.

Australia’s Cordell Construction Cost Index already shows residential construction costs sitting 35.4% higher than in late 2019. New home completions are falling short of what’s needed to hit the government’s 1.2 million homes target. The supply problem existed before this latest cost shock arrived.

Force Two: Capital Gains Tax Reform Is Closer Than It Looks

In parallel, signals are strengthening that the Albanese government is moving toward reducing the capital gains tax discount on investment properties — potentially from 50% to 33%.

The political framing is straightforward: intergenerational fairness, helping first home buyers, rebalancing the tax system. And in isolation, the argument has surface-level appeal.

But housing is not purely a tax debate. It is, at its core, a supply problem.

Industry modelling tells a different story to the government’s pitch:

  • Reducing the CGT discount alone could cut around 12,000 new homes per year — roughly 5–6% of annual new builds
  • More aggressive modelling suggests up to 33,353 fewer homes built over five years
  • Rents could rise an additional 1–2% above already elevated growth rates

Investors fund two in every five new homes built in Australia. In a market where private capital is doing the heavy lifting that government cannot afford, reducing the incentive to invest in new property does not help first home buyers — it removes the supply pipeline they depend on.

The investors most affected are not the large portfolio holders who can restructure their tax affairs. They are the everyday Australians — one or two properties, building toward a retirement — who are actively contributing to housing supply and reducing their long-term dependence on the public purse.

What This Means for Brisbane

Brisbane’s position is worth understanding clearly.

Vacancy rates are already at 1.1% and projected to fall further. Apartment prices have risen 28% and CBRE forecasts continued growth through to 2030. The Newstead and Teneriffe precinct — Brisbane’s most tightly held — remains undersupplied relative to demand, with quality stock commanding significant premiums over the broader market.

When construction costs rise nationally, the ripple effect on new apartment pricing is felt acutely in precincts like this one — where land is scarce, projects are complex, and supply is structurally limited by geography.

For buyers considering a purchase in 2026, these forces don’t suggest a market pause is coming. They suggest the window for making a well-considered acquisition — before costs feed further through the system — is narrowing.

The Bottom Line

Rising construction costs and potential CGT reform are not competing forces. They are compounding ones — arriving simultaneously in a market that was already under-supplied.

The consequences play out differently depending on where you sit:

  • Buyers — acting on solid fundamentals sooner rather than later carries a stronger rationale than it did twelve months ago
  • Investors — the case for owning quality property in undersupplied markets strengthens when both construction costs and tax reform reduce the future supply of comparable assets
  • Renters — both forces point toward continued upward pressure on rents, particularly in inner-city precincts

At Cavalé, we believe the best decisions are made with a clear understanding of the market — not the headlines. If you’d like to discuss what this means for your property position, we’re always available for a direct conversation.

Brisbane Is Rising — And the World Is Starting to Notice

For those of us who have chosen to call Newstead home, this has never been a difficult place to love. The river at morning light. The walk along Breakfast Creek. James Street on a Friday evening. The rooftops, the restaurants, the quiet confidence of a city that never needed to shout about itself.

But the world is catching up.

In Resonance Consulting’s World’s Best Cities 2026 — one of the most comprehensive urban rankings on the planet, drawing on an Ipsos survey of more than 21,000 respondents across 30 countries — Brisbane jumped eleven places, from 90th to 79th. It was one of the biggest rises of any city globally. The report singled out Brisbane’s second-best air quality, fourth-best weather, and a wave of new developments drawing people outdoors and into the city’s growing cultural fabric.

That’s not a fluke. That’s a city in motion.

The numbers behind the feeling

What often gets missed in the lifestyle conversation is just how compelling the underlying fundamentals have become.

Brisbane’s apartment vacancy rate currently sits at 1.1% — already the tightest it has been in a generation. By 2030, CBRE forecasts it falling further still, to 0.7%. At that level, the market isn’t just tight. It’s historically unprecedented.

Demand is running at roughly 14,000 apartments per year. Supply is delivering around 5,000. That’s not a gap — it’s a canyon. And with construction costs forecast to escalate by 8% in 2027 and 10% in 2028, the economics of new development become increasingly difficult over time. What’s being built now — and what completes before that cost wave hits — carries a structural advantage that compounds year after year.

Apartment prices in Brisbane are forecast to grow by 28% between now and 2030. The strongest growth is forecast in 2026 and 2027 — not later, not at some hypothetical future point. Now.

The 2032 effect — and why it’s already in motion

Brisbane’s $120 billion Olympic infrastructure pipeline is often spoken about as something that will happen. What’s less understood is that it is already happening — and that the economic multiplier effect, the transport upgrades, the precinct transformations, are already being priced into the city’s trajectory.

History offers useful perspective. London’s East Village — originally built as the 2012 Olympic Athletes’ Village — became one of the most sought-after new addresses in the city post-Games. Brisbane is building toward the same legacy. Newstead, Bowen Hills, Northshore Hamilton — these are the precincts at the centre of that story.

The city that hosts the Olympics in 2032 is not the same city it was five years prior. The preparation is the prize.

What this means if you own here

Owning in inner Newstead or Teneriffe right now is not simply a lifestyle decision — though it is certainly that. It is a position held in one of the most structurally undersupplied, liveability-driven, and infrastructure-backed markets in the country.

The world’s ranking systems are beginning to reflect what residents of this peninsula have known for some time. Brisbane is not catching up. Brisbane is arriving.

And the people who chose to be here early will look back on this period as the one that mattered most.


Brisbane in Autumn: Why Inner-City Apartment Living Is Having Its Moment

There is something about Brisbane in March that feels like a turning point. The humidity softens, the city exhales, and the evening light that filters through the streets of Newstead takes on a quality that is almost cinematic. For those who call the inner north home, this is the season that reminds them exactly why they chose to live here.

The Autumn Shift

Autumn in Brisbane is not like autumn anywhere else. There are no dramatic colour changes or morning frosts — instead, it is a gradual recalibration. The city slows slightly, rooftop bars become comfortable well into the evening, and the Saturday morning ritual of coffee and the farmers market at Gasworks becomes the one appointment no one cancels.

For apartment residents in Newstead and Teneriffe, the cooler months bring an ease to daily life that summer, for all its energy, simply cannot match. Walks along the riverwalk stretch longer. The dining room at Evra fills earlier, conversations lingering well past the last course. The neighbourhood — always vibrant — feels, in autumn, like it is at its most quietly confident.

The Market Reflects the Moment

It is perhaps no coincidence that Brisbane’s inner-city apartment market continues to perform strongly as we move into 2026. The latest figures from PropTrack confirm Brisbane apartment values rose 18.3 per cent over the past twelve months, with inner Brisbane unit prices reaching a median of $1.18 million. Rental vacancy rates across the inner north sit below 0.8 per cent — and with the Brisbane 2032 Olympics accelerating investment into surrounding suburbs, the medium-term case for quality apartment ownership in this precinct has rarely been clearer.

What the numbers do not capture is the texture of the life on offer. The ability to walk to a restaurant that knows your order, to cycle to work along the river, to spend a Sunday at the markets and still be home before noon — these are the things that bring people to Newstead and Teneriffe, and the things that keep them here.

The Cavalé Perspective

As the agency exclusively managing sales across Cavcorp’s portfolio of buildings in Newstead/Teneriffe, we see this dynamic play out every week. Buyers are increasingly discerning — they are not simply purchasing square metres, they are purchasing a way of living.


The Cavalé Edition is our weekly look at life, property, and everything in between across Brisbane.

James St Up Late Returns for a Gilded Night Out

Clear your calendar and alert the group chat. Brisbane’s most fashionable night out is returning to James Street — and this time, it’s dripping in gold.

On Thursday 19 March, James St Up Late transforms the precinct into a glowing after-dark playground of late-night shopping, champagne pours and the kind of spontaneous decisions that only feel sensible once the sun goes down.

Consider this your invitation to indulge in a little midweek glamour. Over 70 of James Street’s most coveted boutiques and dining destinations will trade late for one evening only, with exclusive offers, pop-ups, prizes and special experiences unfolding along the street.

Expect polished shopfronts, music spilling onto the pavement and a distinctly golden atmosphere as Fortitude Valley’s most stylish strip comes alive well after dark.

Start Your Night The Right Way

For Newstead locals looking to start the evening properly, Evra Bar is opening its doors early with a pre-shopping ritual worth arriving for.

From 5pm, the bar will be pouring a line-up of happy hour aperitifs alongside a bar menu designed to fuel the night ahead — think something crisp in hand before the stroll down to James Street begins. The perfect first stop before the golden glow of Up Late takes over the precinct.

The Shopping Circuit

For one night, James Street becomes a glossy loop of fashion, beauty and indulgence.

A few highlights worth pencilling into your route:

New arrival Alpha60 is offering a cheeky 20 percent off storewide, while Camargue is turning shopping into a game with in-store bingo and prizes to match.

At Gerard’s, cult hair authority St Louis Says will pop up with complimentary pours and product spoils.

New wine bar Fountainhead Winehouse will host refined tastings inside Mud Australia, pairing ceramics with equally elegant wines.

Meanwhile, Penelope Bistro & Bar is serving its version of girl dinner for the night — tiny martinis, truffle fries and classic Caesars — and Venroy is elevating your next escape with a Travel Essentials bag giveaway, plus gifts with entry.

In other words: arrive early and wear comfortable shoes.

The Party Bags

The carpark between Harveys and CAMILLA will undergo its own transformation, becoming the Up Late Quad — a hub of giveaways, treats and high-value temptation.

This is where you’ll find the coveted 2026 James St Up Late Party Bags, each valued at more than $600 and filled with favourites including Go-To Skincare, Ultra Violette, Ssaint, Messina, Silk Laundry, K18 and more.

And because a little suspense is part of the fun, one in every 20 bags contains an extra-special prize.

For those planning to shop with endurance, Allpress Atelier will be serving complimentary affogatos to keep the evening going.

One Night Only

If previous years are anything to go by, James St Up Late will once again be the social event of the season.

So gather the group chat, pull out something fabulous to wear and lean into the gold theme — because when James Street throws a party, Brisbane shows up.

Where: James St, Fortitude Valley
When: Thursday 19 March, 5pm – 8pm