With yields under pressure across Queensland, property investors are weighing short-term tourism income against stable tenancies—and the maths might surprise you.
As first-home buyers face record affordability pressure, financial advisors are backing a hybrid approach that lets renters build wealth while waiting for the right property moment.
As investors eye Olympic infrastructure gains, South Brisbane's tree-lined streets and proximity to the CBD are reshaping its demographic—and pushing values beyond the state median.
As Queensland's median property price hovers near $780,000, savvy purchasers are increasingly factoring in flood maps and heat stress over traditional metrics, forcing a quiet recalibration of Brisbane's property hotspots.
While prices are climbing again, today's Brisbane market shows discipline the pandemic boom never had—driven by infrastructure rather than panic buying.
Stricter planning codes for Fortitude Valley and South Brisbane are forcing developers to rethink tower heights and street-level activation, with knock-on effects for project viability across the $780k-plus market.
As interstate migration pushes prices across the Southside, this riverside pocket combines prestige, lifestyle and entry points that won't require a second mortgage.
With Queensland's median climbing toward $800k and interstate migration reshaping demand, Brisbane investors face a critical choice—and the answer depends on five key metrics.
A riverside trophy property sale this month has reset expectations across Brisbane's premium market, even as clearance rates suggest caution among middle-tier buyers.
With median values climbing toward $1.2 million and Olympics-era infrastructure investment, this Northside beach pocket is attracting savvy buyers seeking proximity to water and city without the premium price tag of Hamilton or New Farm.
Interstate migration and younger buyer cohorts are rewriting the rules for Brisbane's property market, with specific suburbs poised to benefit most from changing population patterns.
With Queensland's median hovering near $780k and rental yields under pressure, we crunch the numbers to see whether staying a tenant or taking the plunge makes financial sense in 2026.