Buyers score $350k discounts on homes
HOMEBUYERS have been scoring killers deals as Sydney’s cooling housing market encourages sellers to accept lower prices — but some suburbs are offering more bargains than others.
HOMEBUYERS have been scoring killers deals as Sydney’s cooling housing market encourages sellers to accept lower prices — but some suburbs are offering more bargains than others.
HOUSE prices have grown to more than 20 times the average household income in a range of Sydney suburbs, with two city regions now the least affordable housing markets in the country.
FALLING prices are expected to push an avalanche of homes onto the market in the first half of the year turning Sydney from an extreme seller’s market to a buyer’s one, housing experts claim.
HOUSING experts have tipped Sydney home prices to fall by another 5 to 10 per cent over the next two years after dropping over the last three months of 2017.
SYDNEY property prices are getting cheaper and cheaper after falling for the fourth consecutive month. And new research reveals the trend is likely to continue.
HOME buyers across much of Sydney will be in for a better year over 2018, with one trend in particular showing buyers have a chance to bounce back after being shut out the market for years.
PROPERTY prices have been swinging wildly across Sydney regions in the aftermath of the recent boom, with some suburbs continuing to boom while others saw price falls.
EVER wondered what $113k a week rent gets you? One of the world’s largest homes is now up for grabs with a revolving dance floor, 23-bathrooms and walk-in fridge but it also has one thing in common with some regular Aussie abodes.
PANICKED homeowners in pockets of Sydney have been selling their properties for well below the prices they paid as the slowdown in the city’s housing market intensifies.
NEW realestate.com.au research provided exclusively to the Daily Telegraph showed rents have been tumbling in pockets of the eastern suburbs, far west and north, while remaining in the deep freeze across much of the rest of the city.
Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/journalists/aidan-devine/page/186