Canberra property hotspots emerge from affordability improvements
Canberra has posted the strongest affordability improvement in the country, and for investors the story is less about prices and more about income strength, tenant capacity and long-term stability.
At a time when affordability pressures continue to dominate housing discussions nationally, the Australian Capital Territory has quietly emerged as a relative outperformer.
The latest Housing Affordability Report (HAR) from the Real Estate Institute of Australia shows Canberra recording the strongest improvement in housing affordability of any jurisdiction over the September 2025 quarter.
For property investors, the significance of this shift lies less in short-term price movements and more in what it reveals about the underlying health of the market, particularly tenant capacity, income resilience and long-term sustainability.
What the affordability report is telling investors
The ACT now requires the lowest proportion of median family income in Australia to meet both mortgage repayments and rental costs.
Average home loan repayments account for 31.7 per cent of median family income, while rent absorbs just 18.4 per cent, well below the national rental benchmark of 24.3 per cent.
This combination is rare.
In many jurisdictions, improving rental yields have come at the expense of tenant affordability. In Canberra, affordability has improved largely because household incomes remain strong, rather than because rents have been suppressed.
From an investment perspective, this distinction matters. Markets underpinned by income strength tend to be more resilient during economic shifts, with lower arrears risk and greater capacity to absorb regulatory or interest-rate changes.
Tenant affordability as an investment asset
Rental affordability is often framed as a social issue, but it is also a commercial one.
When rent consumes a smaller share of household income, tenants are generally better positioned to:
- meet rental obligations consistently
- remain in properties for longer periods
- maintain properties appropriately
- absorb moderate rent increases over time.
In a policy environment where investor settings are increasingly sensitive to rental stress, the ACT’s position as the most affordable rental market nationally provides an important buffer.
Rather than relying on rapid rent escalation to drive returns, investors in Canberra are more likely to benefit from income reliability and tenancy stability.
Where investors may look within the ACT
While the HAR does not identify specific suburbs, broader affordability and median-price reporting commonly highlights several ACT locations as relatively more accessible entry points compared with the inner north and inner south.
Belconnen region
Suburbs such as Holt, Charnwood, Macgregor and Dunlop are frequently cited as offering lower median price points while remaining close to employment hubs, retail centres and transport corridors.
These areas often attract stable family and working households, aligning with the ACT’s strong income profile.
Tuggeranong region
Suburbs such as Kambah, Calwell, Gowrie and Gordon are often associated with longer tenancy lengths and consistent rental demand.
These characteristics align closely with the HAR’s finding that ACT households retain strong capacity to meet rental payments, supporting predictable income streams for investors.
Gungahlin corridor
Areas such as Taylor, Bonner and Amaroo, particularly townhouses and units, are often referenced as comparatively accessible within a growth corridor that continues to attract first home buyers and younger professional households.
This is relevant given first home buyers now account for more than 40 per cent of owner-occupier loans in the ACT, one of the highest proportions nationally.
The investment relevance of these suburbs is not about chasing the next growth hotspot. Rather, it is about how they sit within the ACT’s broader affordability and income settings:
- The ACT records the highest median family income nationally ($3,533 per week).
- Rental costs consume a smaller share of income than anywhere else in Australia.
- Average owner-occupier loan sizes in the ACT declined over the September quarter, suggesting improving accessibility rather than escalating financial stretch.
Suburbs priced below the Territory median, yet supported by income-secure households, may therefore offer investors a balance of sustainability, liquidity and reduced downside risk.
A market recalibrating, not overheating
Importantly, the HAR data does not yet reflect the impact of the Commonwealth’s Help to Buy Scheme, which commenced after the September quarter and is expected to influence first home buyer behaviour in coming reporting periods.
This may further support turnover in entry-level segments without necessarily fuelling excessive price growth.
For investors, this suggests a market that is recalibrating towards balance rather than one driven by speculative momentum.
The investor takeaway
Canberra’s current affordability settings point to a jurisdiction built on capacity rather than stretch.
In practical terms, this means tenants who can afford to pay their rent, buyers who are less exposed to repayment shock and a market less reliant on aggressive rent or price growth to sustain returns
For long-term investors, these fundamentals often matter more than headline yields.
In a national landscape where affordability pressures remain elevated, the ACT’s combination of income strength, improving affordability and tenant sustainability positions it as a market worthy of closer consideration.














