Shock reason stopping Aussies from owning a home

16 hours ago 2

One major issue is preventing Aussies from owning a home and it’s got nothing to do with investors, capital gains tax or ‘intergenerational inequity’.


Today’s property market presents a great divide between us and our grandparents.

But are the reasons and motivations for buying property today still the same as they were 10, 20, or 30 years ago?

While a recent report shows that today’s potential property buyers are a mixed bag, it offers plenty of real estate opportunities for buyers and owners of every age.

For a start, three-quarters of Baby Boomers (62 to 80 years olds) have a mortgage, compared to 35 per cent of Generation Z buyers, or those in the 14-to-29-year-old bracket. The report also found a third of Gen Zers are renters, while another 30 per cent live with their parents, making them the most likely of all age groups to do so.

MORE: Australia’s ‘happiest places to live’ revealed

There are plenty of real estate opportunities for buyers and owners of every age.


MORE: Jackie O’s cunning $30m exit plan amid Kyle split

According to the report, property costs and limited knowledge of the property market are the main reasons why younger people are abandoning the traditional great Australian dream.

Less than four in ten Gen Zers believe property ownership is important – a sharp difference to the one third of Baby Boomers and Gen X buyers (45- to 61-year-olds) who believe the opposite.

On the other hand, some of these earlier generations remain keen to buy a house, especially when it comes to investment opportunities. The research found that Millennials (those born between 1981 and 1996) own one quarter of residential investment properties – a higher figure than Baby Boomers, Gen Xers and Gen Zers.

MORE: Budget U-turn to drag Aus into old housing trap

Property costs and limited knowledge of the property market are the main reasons why younger people are abandoning the traditional great Australian dream.


POWERING UP

Meanwhile, property costs aren’t just limiting younger people’s abilities to purchase a house – it’s restricting their updates to coveted energy efficiency details. And, these details are becoming more important to home buyers of every age.

Over three in five of property owners have improved their new properties’ sustainability in some way, with popular changes including the installation of solar panels, double glazing and insulation.

So, what does all this data point to? First and foremost, I would encourage Gen Zers not to be discouraged by these findings. As I mentioned earlier this year, this group is a highly tech-savvy one, and is determined, confident and focused.

MORE: How David Jones signed its own death warrant

The RBA cash rate over time. Picture: RBA


Westpac’s Home Ownership Report in November 2025 showed 35 per cent of Gen Zers plan to buy their first home within five years, up 5 per cent since January 2025. In addition, more than half of Gen Z buyers (55 per cent) are considering rentvesting.

Other generations should also be encouraged by current times, especially when it comes to the extraordinary number of property reports, statistics and data we now have at our fingertips.

MORE: $30m of Bondi ‘legacy’ for sale

CEO of McGrath Estate Agents, John McGrath said technology can help potential buyers enormously.


It’s true our grandparents enjoyed more affordable real estate prices, but they also experienced Australia’s highest cash rate of 17.5 per cent in January 1990 and a near-record inflation level of 17.7 per cent in March 1975.

But technology alone has given today’s generations an excellent reason to appreciate the 2026 market for what it can offer smart people of all ages.

MORE: Australia’s $85bn savings crisis exposed

Broke 39yo truckie paid off home in 10 years

‘$90 Bunnings gadget saved me from a $3m mistake’

Read Entire Article