Hobart post-peak: is affordability returning?
Hobart had the biggest percentage rise of any capital city from 2015 to 2022 - more than 110% cumulative - driven by interstate migration, short-stay conversion, and tight supply. Then from mid-2022 to mid-2024, it was one of the first markets to turn, with median prices softening 5-10%. In 2026, is affordability actually returning?
What drove the boom and the peak
Interstate migration from Sydney and Melbourne peaked 2020-2022, chasing lifestyle and lower prices. Short-stay conversion (Airbnb) removed ~2,000 dwellings from long-term rental supply across Greater Hobart. State-based supply constraints (limited greenfield, planning delays) tightened things further.
By 2021, Hobart’s median dwelling price had reached $680k-$720k, comparable to Perth at that point and up from $360k in 2015. Rental vacancy rates hit 0.3% - the tightest in the nation.
What turned it
Interstate migration slowed dramatically in 2023-2024 as Sydney and Melbourne softened and the cost-of-living shock reduced moving appetite. Tasmania’s employment growth lagged the mainland. Short-stay regulation tightened (Clarence LGA introduced caps in 2023; other LGAs followed). Some dwellings returned to the long-term rental pool.
The 2026 picture
Median dwelling prices in Greater Hobart are 5-12% below the 2022 peak. In real terms (adjusted for inflation), prices are 15-20% below peak. Rental vacancies have loosened to 1.5-2.5%, more consistent with a balanced market.
Affordability indices - the ratio of median price to median household income - are still well above pre-2015 levels but have retreated to 2018-2019 ranges. For local buyers on local incomes, the mathematics of home ownership is meaningfully better than it was at peak.
The supply pipeline
Dwelling approvals have normalised to historical averages after peaking 2020-2022. There is no construction overhang the way there is in Perth or Brisbane. Supply remains moderately constrained.
The outlook
Near term (2026-2027): prices likely flat to +5%. The correction has happened; the recovery is slow because migration is no longer the tailwind.
Medium term (2028-2030): depends on mainland cycles. If Sydney and Melbourne resume material growth, interstate migration will partially redirect to Hobart again, and Hobart prices can move 20-30% above 2026 levels. If mainland markets remain subdued, Hobart will track broadly flat in nominal terms.
For buyers
Owner-occupiers: better entry point than at any time since 2018. Selection matters - avoid the 2018-2021 vintage apartments in central Hobart, which have been the hardest-hit segment.
Investors: yields are workable (4.5-5.5% gross in middle-ring suburbs). The short-stay premium is gone; long-term rental is the only viable strategy in most LGAs. Growth assumptions should be modest.
Downsizers from the mainland: the economics work again. Selling an inner-ring Sydney or Melbourne dwelling for $1.6m and buying a comparable Hobart property for $950k leaves meaningful retirement capital in hand.