By Guest Blogger, Luke Metcalfe, Founder, Microburbs
Next Level Wealth
When it comes to public housing, many property investors and home buyers are quick to jump to conclusions. “Avoid it,” some say. “It's bad for capital growth.” But is it really that simple?
To work this out, we didn’t just go with hearsay - we go deep into the data. We've conducted a comprehensive analysis of more than 57,000 property transactions across Australia, covering 13 years of sales between 2011 and 2024. Unlike most property analyses that rely on suburb-wide medians, we dive down to the microburb level - individual streets and pockets, giving a much clearer picture of how public housing truly affects Australian suburbs property value growth.
For every property in our study, we looked at:
This is realised capital growth, not theoretical models or agent opinions.
If public housing makes up less than 3% of a microburb (a pocket of 120 similar homes), the average annual capital growth is 10.9%. That’s strong, especially across a national dataset.
But when public housing crosses the 3% threshold, the growth drops to 9% per year.
Zooming out:
So yes - proximity does matter. A single public housing unit in a nearby street might not hurt, but being surrounded by public housing can have a measurable drag on your returns.
You might think, “What if the public housing is being sold and the area is gentrifying?” Unfortunately, the data doesn't support that assumption - at least not within a 5-year window. In fact, areas where public housing decreased still saw lower capital growth than consistently low-public housing areas.
Even worse, increasing public housing led to 1% lower annual growth.
Not necessarily. The data shows trends, not absolutes. Properties near or within public housing areas can still perform well—especially if other fundamentals are strong.
Public housing is one factor among many. But it’s clearly one worth understanding—not just fearing blindly.
Whether you're a first-home buyer or a seasoned investor, the takeaway is clear:
Public housing isn't a no-go zone. It's a signal—one of many—that should inform, not override, your property decisions. When used alongside crime stats, school ratings, demographic trends, and capital growth forecasts, you can uncover pockets of opportunity others overlook.
By arming yourself with the right data, you can invest smarter—and sleep better at night.
To have one of our friendly Buyers' Advocate's contact you, click here to:
call us on 1300 655 615 today.