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By the Numbers: What Hobart's Housing Crisis Really Looks Like

New data reveals the stark reality behind Tasmania's capital city housing squeeze, with median prices, vacancy rates and development timelines telling a cautionary tale.

By Tasmania News Desk · Published 29 June 2026 at 11:36 pm

3 min read

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Hobart's housing shortage isn't just anecdotal—the numbers paint a sobering picture that urban planners and policymakers are scrambling to address. New data released this month by the Tasmanian Housing Authority reveals the scale of the challenge facing the city's residential landscape.

Median house prices across greater Hobart have climbed to $695,000, up 34% over the past three years alone. In sought-after inner suburbs like South Hobart and Glebe, properties regularly exceed $850,000. Yet vacancy rates languish at just 0.8%—well below the healthy 3% threshold economists consider sustainable. For renters, the picture is bleaker: median weekly rent now sits at $485, representing a 41% increase since 2021.

The development pipeline offers little relief. Council approval data shows only 247 new residential units approved across Hobart's CBD and immediate surrounds in the past 12 months—a figure urban strategists describe as insufficient given the city's projected population growth of 1.2% annually. Meanwhile, applications for multi-unit developments on key sites like the Salamanca precinct and Queen Street corridor remain stuck in assessment phase, some exceeding 18 months of review.

Infrastructure bottlenecks compound the problem. Transport analysis reveals that 62% of new residential approvals cluster within 2km of the city centre, placing extraordinary pressure on existing utilities and road networks. The Hobart City Council's long-awaited transport master plan—due to guide development through 2050—has been delayed three times since 2023.

Perhaps most striking: foreign investment accounts for 18.4% of all residential property purchases in the greater Hobart area, the highest proportion in any Australian capital outside Sydney and Melbourne. This concentration of non-resident ownership effectively removes properties from the active rental market, further constricting supply.

The government has committed $127 million to affordable housing initiatives, yet independent analysis suggests this addresses less than 15% of the projected shortfall over the next decade. A proposed uplift in development density on residential sites within walking distance of public transport could yield an additional 1,840 dwellings by 2035, according to modelling commissioned by the Urban Land Institute.

These aren't mere statistical abstractions—they translate into working families unable to secure homes, young professionals delaying homeownership, and neighbourhoods becoming increasingly homogeneous. With council elections approaching in October, housing policy numeracy will likely prove decisive.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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