QLD/NSW floods: Underinsured by ‘hundreds of thousands of dollars’
Flood-affected homeowners could be left with a hefty bill or forced to walk away as experts warn some may be underinsured by ”hundreds of thousands of dollars”.
Flood-affected homeowners could be left with a hefty bill or forced to walk away as experts warn some may be underinsured by ”hundreds of thousands of dollars”.
History has shown Brisbane’s property market is resilient, with house prices soaring up to 123.4 per cent since the last big flood event. SEARCH INTERACTIVE
One Queenslander is awesome, but four Queenslanders? That’s a party! This homestead is made up of four of the architectural icons, and interstate and overseas buyers are circling.
Waterlogged and full of mould, rentals across southeast Queensland are being declared no-go zones, with the flooding crisis expected to worsen housing availability and affordability.
The median house price in this Queensland suburb is now more than its is in the celebrity enclave of Byron Bay, and units in one Brisbane suburb have soared past Bondi Beach.
One bedroom apartments are being snapped up for obscene prices by interstate buyers not afraid to spend north of $2 million for their place on one of Queensland’s hottest streets.
Cashed-up interstate business moguls and at least one big name Aussie celebrity are rumoured to be in the race to secure a beachfront block that insiders tip will sell for mega millions.
A local buyer has beaten interstate competition to secure a Queensland bush retreat with its own private beach near a major city.
A Brisbane house has earned its owners a whopping $900,000 in profit in just 19 months, as buyers turn their backs on building new homes due to spiralling material and trade costs and delays.
A Brisbane residence with a vintage car showroom has smashed the suburb sales record by a jawdropping $1.4m, which alone is equivalent to the entire suburb’s median house price.
Original URL: https://www.couriermail.com.au/journalists/samantha-healy/page/58