Australia to put two-year ban on foreigners buying existing homes amid housing crunch
Australia has announced a two-year ban on foreign investors purchasing existing homes starting April 1, 2025, in a bid to improve the housing supply. The ban, expected to free up around 1,800 properties annually for local buyers, coincides with ri...

"We're banning foreign purchases of established dwellings from April 1, 2025, until March 31 2027," treasurer Jim Chalmers said in a statement with housing minister Clare O'Neil. It added that a review would be undertaken on whether the ban would be extended.
Dissatisfaction with housing in Australia reached an all-time high last year and it is an issue that is expected to dominate a general election due by May.
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O'Neil said in comments televised by the Australian Broadcasting Corp that the ban would likely free up around 1,800 properties per year for local buyers.
"These initiatives are a small but important part of our already big and broad housing agenda which is focused on boosting supply and helping more people into homes," the ministers' statement said.
Housing is the largest contributor to the rising cost of living in Australia and is set to be a key issue at the upcoming election. A recent poll had the centre-left Labor government lagging its main conservative political opposition.
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The government recently passed housing reforms including a shared equity scheme and tax incentives for developers, to ease cost pressures and achieve a target of building 1.2 million new homes by 2030.
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