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MURRAY BRIDGE PROPERTY IS IN HIGH DEMAND – WHAT DOES THAT MEAN FOR YOU?

House values rose by nearly 10 per cent and rents nearly 20 per cent in 2023. Where does that leave local homeowners, investors and renters?

There’s money being made on the Murraylands’ fast-growing property market. Photo: Getty Images.

More than $123 million worth of residential property has changed hands in Murray Bridge over the past year, making it one of the state’s hottest real estate markets.

House values have gone up by 9.4 per cent in that time, according to industry analysts Corelogic, to a median of $390,000.

The rental market has been hotter still, as Murray Bridge rents increased by 18.1% to a median of $430 per week over the past year.

That was the highest increase anywhere in South Australia, and fifth-highest in regional Australia – great if you’re an investor, not so much if you’re renting.

Corelogic suggested more and more investors, rather than owner-occupiers, were driving the continued growth of property prices across Australia.

“Buyers … may be wealthier, or using profits from resale or some other windfall of capital to help with their purchase,” the firm’s analysts said in their report Best of the Best 2023.

“Alternatively, buyers may be targeting relatively low-priced markets.

“It is reasonable to suggest that both of these factors were in play over the course of 2023.”

Rental increases, meanwhile, could be explained in part by a surge in the number of migrants who had come to Australia since the end of COVID-related border closures.

Rents across the country were likely to rise more slowly in 2024 as immigration levels normalised, interest rates flattened, renters moved into more affordable markets or share houses, and new homes were completed.

However, Proptrack economist Paul Ryan said in another report, that didn’t mean things would get much easier for renters in the near future.

“Despite the easing, vacancy rates have trended down for over three years following strong rental demand and a slowdown in new construction,” he said.

“Conditions will remain tough for those looking to rent in the new year period amid strong demand.”

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