{"id":108474,"date":"2026-01-06T10:30:00","date_gmt":"2026-01-05T23:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/en.econostrum.info\/au\/?p=108474"},"modified":"2026-01-05T22:30:55","modified_gmt":"2026-01-05T11:30:55","slug":"where-house-prices-are-about-to-explode","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/en.econostrum.info\/au\/where-house-prices-are-about-to-explode\/","title":{"rendered":"The Hidden Suburbs Where House Prices Are About to Explode"},"content":{"rendered":"
Owning a house remains the great Australian dream \u2014 though for many, that dream now sits further away from the city skyline. As property prices keep rising, the strongest growth in 2026 is expected to come from outer suburbs, where first home buyers and investors are chasing what\u2019s still affordable.<\/p>\n
After a year of rapid gains, the housing market is cooling slightly, but the appetite for detached homes hasn\u2019t faded. Analysts expect values in outer suburbs to keep climbing, even as interest rates edge higher.<\/p>\n
Recent data from Cotality shows home values rose 9.7 per cent across capital cities in 2025, with outer suburbs leading the surge. In Perth, the newly rezoned area of Mandogalup topped the list with a 33 per cent jump in median prices, driven by its proximity to the CBD and new housing developments.<\/p>\n
In Sydney\u2019s outer south-west, Menangle Park and Gilead both recorded growth of more than 20 per cent, while Frankston North in Melbourne climbed by 21 per cent, details AFR<\/a>. The pattern repeats across the country: buyers are being pushed outwards by affordability constraints, turning once-overlooked suburbs into hot markets.<\/p>\nThe Affordability Squeeze<\/h2>\n