25 September 2025

Rising rates, higher taxes, red tape and slow planning system blamed for property sector confidence collapse

| By Ian Bushnell
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Construction of townhouses

ACT property sector confidence is the lowest in the nation. Photo: Michelle Kroll.

Rising costs, red tape and deep concerns about government performance have sent confidence levels in the ACT property industry plummeting, according to new data.

The latest Procore/Property Council quarterly snapshot shows ACT property sector confidence has collapsed to the lowest in the nation.

The figures are the latest ammunition in the property sector’s campaign for planning and tax reforms to drive new development and meet the ACT Government’s own housing targets.

READ ALSO CSIRO land shock: ACT will acquire 460 ha less than expected

Despite staffing expectations remaining positive and firms still looking to grow, other indicators are heading south.

Confidence has fallen to 104 index points from 111 last quarter, the lowest in the country. A score of 100 is considered neutral.

Forward work schedules are trending upwards, despite wider feasibility pressures, but national and state economic growth expectations are negative, unlike everywhere else in the country.

Residential capital growth expectations are also down, and in the usually buoyant office market, growth expectations are sharply down, the steepest decline in the nation.

Confidence in the ability to secure finance for projects has more than halved since last quarter.

The ACT is also the only jurisdiction forecasting a fall in retail capital growth expectations, and the retirement and hotels sectors are also forecasting weaker conditions.

The property sector’s sentiment towards the Federal Government is the lowest of any jurisdiction, while property taxes and charges ranked as the top issue for the industry at the Territory level.

Property Council ACT & Capital Region Executive Director Ashlee Berry said the results confirmed what the industry has been warning for months – that the ACT is heading over a housing and investment cliff without urgent intervention.

“Confidence in the ACT has dropped to 104 index points, down from 111 last quarter – now the lowest of any jurisdiction in the country. We are the only state or territory tracking down while others hold steady or lift,” Ms Berry said.

“The ACT is the only market nationally where survey respondents have negative expectations for both national and state economic growth, while confidence in the ACT Government’s ability to manage growth has slumped from minus 33.7 points to minus 59.6 points.”

READ ALSO Going up: Re-zoning to enable 1000 more homes in inner north

Ms Berry said the collapse in office growth expectations underlines how fragile confidence was in Canberra’s commercial market and the need for immediate action on rates reform, faster approvals and a stronger precinct strategy.

In housing, rising rates, higher taxes, red tape and a slow planning system were all eroding viability, shrinking the pipeline and continuing to constrain delivery.

“It’s a clear signal that feasibility, not demand, is the barrier to getting more homes on the ground,” Ms Berry said.

“We have been warning for months that the ACT was heading for this cliff. The only way out is for government to work with industry to repair the fundamentals: land release, planning reform, and fairer taxes and charges.”

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devils_advocate6:58 pm 30 Sep 25

The act gumbyment thinks it can tax its way to prosperity

But tax policy 101 says you tax things that are neither discretionary nor subject to flight

Taxing development activity simply reduces the level of activity and hence the overall revenue take

Incidental Tourist11:21 pm 25 Sep 25

On a positive side, falling investments keep property prices subdued. Raising property taxes pay debt. Low market demand means buyer’s market. Rents and rental availability are balanced. Interest rates are decreasing. Strong regulations protect consumers. Overall housing becomes more affordable. What’s the problem?

HiddenDragon10:18 pm 25 Sep 25

The reference above to “fairer taxes and charges” obviously means lower taxes and charges, paid for by higher taxes and charges on others.

This is the same approach that has been taken since at least the 2012 debate over Labor’s tax “reforms”, when the property sector short-sightedly cheered on the changes, joined the pile-on against the ACT Liberals and then (shock! horror! who could possibly have seen this coming?) got done over when the tax changes didn’t work out as hoped for.

If the ACT property sector, and its various public mouthpieces, widened the debate from what always, as here, sounds like special pleading, to a broader discussion about the size and cost of the ACT public sector (and the resultant relentless revenue gouging) they might get more traction.

Incidental Tourist8:53 am 26 Sep 25

Surely the root cause is tax reform 2012. It was neither “fair” nor “revenue neutral” – if you still remember the “revenue neutral” promise? Another ingredient is relentless red tape and bureaucratic waste which neither improved quality of buildings nor their market supply.

No surprises here. Yet again we have the Property Council wanting concessions.

Capital Retro10:02 am 25 Sep 25

A lot of people reliant on a buoyant building industry are “hitting the Hume”.

Others who can’t afford the cost of living (some food items in Canberra are twice the cost of Sydney) are moving too.

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