Tasmania's property market has enjoyed a lifestyle migration tailwind for three years, but the state faces a critical supply crunch that won't ease until 2027 at the earliest—and some projects may slip further.
The median property price across Tasmania sits at approximately $560,000, with premium suburbs like Sandy Bay and Battery Point commanding significant premiums. Yet the supply pipeline tells a different story: fewer than 3,200 dwellings are currently approved but not yet completed across the state, according to industry data. That's tight for a market absorbing record migration.
Hobart's inner suburbs remain constrained. Major developments flagged for New Town and South Hobart have faced council delays and infrastructure assessments. A significant mixed-use project near the South Hobart shops, initially expected to deliver 80 apartments by late 2025, is now targeting mid-2027. Similarly, a 120-lot subdivision near Rosny Park won't break ground until September 2026, with first settlements not expected before late 2027.
Launceston offers more promising timelines. The emerging alternative to Hobart has attracted younger buyers priced out of the southern market. Three separate residential estates on the city's western fringe are progressing faster, with first stages due for completion by early 2027. However, even here, developer finance constraints and building material shortages have added six to nine months to original schedules.
Regional areas show mixed momentum. Tasmanian government incentives have triggered activity in towns like Devonport and Ulverstone, where land is cheaper and development costs lower. But buyer demand remains concentrated around Hobart's northern beaches and the Launceston CBD corridor—areas where supply remains tightest.
The real issue isn't demand; it's delivery. First home buyers are exposed, as national trends suggest. With mortgage stress tests biting harder and fewer entry-level homes available, prospective buyers are being pushed toward older stock in less desirable pockets or forced to wait for new releases. Properties under $480,000 are moving quickly, but there aren't enough of them.
Industry experts warn that Tasmania's housing shortage could deepen before improving. Planning approval times average 18–24 weeks, infrastructure contributions are climbing, and developer margins are tightening. Unless approvals accelerate and construction bottlenecks ease, the next two years will remain a seller's market—particularly for anything move-in ready near transport and parks like Queens Domain or Fahan Park.
For buyers, patience may be the hardest currency. The pipeline is real, but it's slow-moving.
This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.