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Brisbane Property Market 2026 — House Prices, Forecast and Suburb Trends

The Brisbane property market in 2026 is best assessed through city-level data, not the national average. Cotality’s March 2026 index showed a 1.8% monthly change, 5.1% quarterly change and 19.0% annual change, with a median dwelling value of $1,101,151.

Last updated: 26 April 2026

PropertyWiki uses official market data and independent analysis. This page is educational only and does not provide personal financial, tax or investment advice.

This page is the evergreen PropertyWiki guide to the Brisbane property market. It should combine the latest monthly value index, house-price context, local supply signals, forecast scenarios and practical decision guidance for buyers, sellers and investors.

Brisbane market snapshot

Brisbane remains one of the strongest capital-city markets, but affordability pressure and supply constraints are increasingly important. In Cotality’s March 2026 data, Brisbane recorded a 1.8% monthly change, a 5.1% quarterly change and a 19.0% annual change in dwelling values.

The median dwelling value was $1,101,151. Treat this as a dwelling-value benchmark, not a separate house-only median.

MetricValueSource
Monthly dwelling value change1.8%Cotality HVI
Quarterly dwelling value change5.1%Cotality HVI
Annual dwelling value change19.0%Cotality HVI
Total return23.0%Cotality HVI
Median dwelling value$1,101,151Cotality HVI

Why the Brisbane market is moving

  • population inflows and relative lifestyle appeal support demand
  • limited established listings and construction constraints support prices
  • unit demand is strong because serviceability constraints push buyers toward cheaper stock
  • 2032 Olympic infrastructure narrative continues to support long-run buyer interest

Risks in the Brisbane property market

  • affordability is now materially stretched
  • rate rises reduce borrowing budgets
  • the strongest growth may already be priced into some suburbs
  • flood risk and insurance costs matter by suburb

Flood and insurance risk note by suburb

Brisbane is a city where flood risk and insurance costs vary materially by suburb. Buyers comparing growth across the Brisbane property market should also compare flood exposure and home and contents insurance premiums, because these can change the true holding cost of an otherwise comparable property.

Suburbs along the Brisbane River, Breakfast Creek, Norman Creek and Oxley Creek catchments — and low-lying parts of suburbs like West End, Rocklea, Graceville, Chelmer, Yeronga, Fairfield, Toowong, New Farm and Newstead — were directly affected in the 2011 and 2022 flood events. Council flood maps now classify these areas in defined flood zones, and insurers price flood cover accordingly.

Practical steps for Brisbane buyers: pull the Brisbane City Council FloodWise Property Report for the exact address before making an offer, request an indicative home and contents insurance quote (with flood cover) on the property, and compare that holding cost against suburbs on higher ground such as Paddington, Bardon, Holland Park or Wavell Heights. The same headline price can produce very different long-run net returns once flood-driven insurance and remediation costs are included.

Buyer strategy

Buyers should compare recent price growth with borrowing capacity and suburb-level supply. A rising city index does not mean every suburb or property type is equally attractive.

Use the national house-price hub to compare city values, then use calculators to estimate stamp duty, borrowing power and rental yield.

Forecast framework

For Brisbane, the forecast question should be framed as scenarios rather than a single prediction. The main swing factors are RBA rates, stock levels, migration, local job growth and affordability.

Add a quarterly update block below this section. The city pages should be updated after each monthly Cotality/PropTrack release and after major RBA changes.

ScenarioTriggerLikely market effect
Base caseRates stay near current level and supply remains tightSlower growth or flat-to-positive conditions
Bull caseRates fall or borrowing capacity improvesBuyer competition returns faster, especially in affordable segments
Bear caseFurther rate rises plus supply increasePrice growth slows sharply or turns negative in weaker suburbs

Frequently asked questions

What is happening in the Brisbane property market in 2026?

The Brisbane property market should be read through the latest monthly data and local supply conditions. In the March 2026 Cotality index, the city recorded a 1.8% monthly change and a 19.0% annual change in dwelling values.

What is the median dwelling value in Brisbane?

Cotality reported a March 2026 median dwelling value of $1,101,151 for Brisbane. This is a dwelling value, not a house-only median, so houses and units may differ materially.

Will Brisbane house prices fall?

PropertyWiki does not forecast a single yes/no answer. The downside case would require a combination of weaker demand, higher borrowing costs, rising listings or a local economic shock. The base case should be assessed quarterly against rates and stock levels.

Is Brisbane good for property investors?

It can be, but investors should compare entry price, rental yield, vacancy, land tax, insurance and suburb liquidity. A strong city index is not enough; the purchase must still work at the property and cash-flow level.

How often should the Brisbane market page be updated?

Update this page monthly after Cotality and PropTrack price data, and after relevant RBA rate decisions. Add suburb-level data quarterly when reliable sources are available.

Sources and official references

Published by PropertyWiki Team · Last updated 26 April 2026

PropertyWiki uses official market data and independent analysis. This page is educational only and does not provide personal financial, tax or investment advice.