Sea and tree-change suburbs top list of most property sales in 2020

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Sea and tree-change suburbs top list of most property sales in 2020
Surfers Paradise (right), Port Macquarie and Orange (left) have topped the list of suburbs with the
most property sales in 2020. Photo: Supplied & iStock

Sea and tree-change
suburbs top list of most
property sales in 2020
DANI GIANNOPOULOSEDITORIAL PRODUCER DEC 20, 2020

Regional towns and holiday hot spots have topped the list of suburbs with
the most property sales in 2020, new Domain data has revealed.
Surfers Paradise on the Gold Coast has topped the list with 1518 property
sales. NSW coastal holiday hot spot Port Macquarie was second with 1161
sales and regional town Orange third with 984 sales.
While Surfers Paradise has retained its top spot from 2019’s list, Port
Macquarie and Orange have moved up in the rankings this year, where
they ranked third and seventh, respectively.
Sea and tree-change suburbs top list of most property sales in 2020
Surfers Paradise and the Gold Coast more broadly have continued to
attract interstate buyers, despite border restrictions, says Ray White
Surfers Paradise CEO Andrew Bell. Photo: Destination Gold Coast

The volume of property sales in each suburb is reflective of the overall
number of dwellings in the area. But, covid restrictions have played an
influential role in the rankings of these traditional high-volume suburbs,
Domain senior research analyst Nicola Powell said.
“The length and degree of covid lockdowns across our states will have had
a varied impact on sales activity,” Dr Powell said.
“What’s quite interesting about the top 30 is there is a number of regional
areas. It speaks to that trend of regional movement we’ve seen. We’ve
already seen people move away from our larger, more expensive capital
cities prior to covid but what we’re now seeing is that covid has accelerated
that. Some of those areas are lifestyle locations as well.”

Suburbs ranked by number of property sales in 2020
Rank              State            Suburb

1                 QLD              Surfers Paradise

2                 NSW              Port Macquarie

3                 NSW              Orange

4                 VIC              Melbourne

5                 SA               Adelaide
Sea and tree-change suburbs top list of most property sales in 2020
6                  QLD            Southport

7                  QLD            Buderim

8                  QLD            Maroochydore

9                  VIC            Point Cook

10                 NSW            Dubbo

11                 VIC            Mildura

12                 VIC            Frankston

13                 QLD            Robina

14                 NSW            Blacktown

15                 VIC            Reservoir

16                 VIC            Berwick

17                 VIC            Traralgon

18                 VIC            Craigieburn

19                 QLD            Palm Beach

20                 QLD            Labrador

21                 NSW            Schofields

22                 QLD            Upper Coomera

23                 VIC            Warrnambool

24                 NSW            Dee Why

25                 VIC            Pakenham

26                 NSW            Ryde

27                 NSW            Wollongong

28                 QLD            Hope Island

29                 NSW            Castle Hill

30                 VIC            Werribee
Source: Domain
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Melbourne has dropped from second to fourth in the rankings this year,
which could be the result of the city’s prolonged restrictions. Victorian
suburbs in the top 30 that also dropped in rank include the south-west
Sea and tree-change suburbs top list of most property sales in 2020
Melbourne suburb of Point Cook which dropped five places, Mildura which
dropped two, and Frankston and Reservoir which each dropped one place.
Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast suburbs have continued to dominate the
rankings, namely due to their high dwellings numbers and high-density
apartment buildings. Gold Coast suburb Southport retained its fifth position,
and the Sunshine Coast suburbs of Buderim (seventh)
and Maroochydore (eighth) saw strong sales numbers for the year.

Port Macquarie north of Sydney ranked second. Photo: LJ Hooker Port
Macquarie

While the start of the year was affected by the advent of COVID-19, Ray
White Surfers Paradise CEO Andrew Bell said the second half created a
momentum he had not witnessed before on the Gold Coast.
“There has been a very prominent shift from people seeing this as a holiday
destination to a place of choice,” Bell said.
“As the year progressed, we just started to see an acceleration of people
saying they’d love to have a place on the Gold Coast and if there was
another pandemic or the like, they’d have a foothold in the Gold Coast.”
The rural NSW town of Orange ranked third. Photo: Evolving Images /
Destination NSW

Bell said despite border restrictions, interstate buyers were still buying sight
unseen with the help of video, virtual inspections and technology.
This strong sales activity has been driven by retirees and investors who are
seeing the opportunity emerge on the Gold Coast.
“Pre-COVID-19 we would get between 4000 to 4500 inquiries a month to
rent properties,” Bell said. “Currently, it has been well over 10,000 a month.
That’s a lot of people saying they’ll move, rent first, and then see whether
they’ll buy after that. Investors are also encouraged by the strong demand
and we have the lowest vacancy factor that we’ve ever had.”
In NSW, rural and coastal suburbs have jumped in the rankings. Most
notably the highly-populated rural town of Dubbo, which has jumped from
22nd to 10th in 2020, and the Sydney northern beaches suburb of Dee
Why which has moved from 20th to 24th.
In Orange, an increase in job opportunities brought by the expansion of
nearby Cadia Mine, alongside the idyllic lifestyle on offer, could be behind
its third-place ranking nationally, local selling agent Adam Savage, of Peter
Fisher Real Estate said.
“When covid started in February, for a few months it was relatively
quiet…but the end of May onwards has been extremely busy. I’ve been 11
years in the industry and I’ve never seen it as busy,” Savage said.
“But also because of covid, people started to realise that they wanted
something safe. This has prompted the tree change they [city dwellers]
were thinking about – now they can work from home.”
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