Australia’s residential construction pipeline softened at the end of the year, with the Australian Bureau of Statistics today releasing its monthly building approvals data for December 2025, showing a notable monthly decline across detached houses and multi-unit dwellings.
Despite the December slowdown, the full calendar year closed on a comparatively strong footing.
“The volume of new dwellings approved for construction decreased by 14.9 per cent in the month of December 2025 to 15,540,” said HIA Chief Economist Tim Reardon. The monthly fall was driven largely by a sharp contraction in multi-unit approvals, which dropped by 31.4 per cent, while detached house approvals recorded a modest 0.3 per cent increase.
Mr Reardon noted that multi-unit approvals, which include apartments and semi-detached homes, tend to be volatile from month to month. He said the December result should not distract from the broader trend, which points to a clear lift in activity over the past year.
“This brought the total number of dwellings approved in 2025 to 195,730, which is 12.8 per cent higher compared to 2024,” he said.
Over the full calendar year, 82,330 multi-unit dwellings were approved, representing a substantial 31.4 per cent increase on the previous year. Detached housing also showed steady improvement, with 113,410 homes approved in 2025, up 2.4 per cent compared to 2024.
According to Mr Reardon, approvals data across both segments indicates that market confidence continues to pick up, underpinned by strong underlying demand for housing. Interest rate cuts during 2025 have helped draw more households back into the market, while high employment levels have provided greater income certainty.
Established home prices have continued to rise above the rate of inflation, highlighting an ongoing imbalance between demand and housing supply. This gap has encouraged a broader range of buyers to consider new housing as a pathway to home ownership. At the same time, activity in the renovations sector has strengthened, with council-approved renovation work increasing by 5.3 per cent in 2025 to $14.3 billion, suggesting some households are choosing to upgrade rather than relocate.
While the uplift in approvals is positive, Mr Reardon cautioned that volumes remain well below the 240,000 new homes required annually to meet the National Housing Accord target of 1.2 million homes.
At a state level, South Australia recorded the strongest growth in dwelling approvals in 2025, up 22.3 per cent in seasonally adjusted terms, followed by New South Wales, Western Australia, Queensland and Victoria. Tasmania was the only state to record a decline, while the Australian Capital Territory and Northern Territory posted strong gains in trend terms.
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