Aussies attached to their homes
Australian property owners are holding on to their homes for longer, new research has found.
According to the latest statistics from RP Data, home owners in Melbourne are particularly attached to their homes, compared to their capital city counterparts, with the average home owner holding on to their property for 4.3 years.
You’re out of free articles for this month
To continue reading the rest of this article, please log in.
Create free account to get unlimited news articles and more!
On a national scale, data for the year to August 2010 showed that houses sold over this period were owned on average for 8.3 years, while units were owned for 7.2 years. Ten years prior, houses on average, were owned for 6.8 years and units for 6.2 years.
RP Data's research analyst Cameron Kusher said the average hold period for houses has increased by 1.7 years during the past five years and by 1.4 years for units.
During the five years to August 2010, house value growth for some of the nation's capital cities has been slower than previous years, which, as Mr Kusher explained, is probably why property owners are holding onto their properties for longer as they await capital growth and a potential boost to equity.