Generation Z - born between the mid to late 1990s and the mid-2000s - will have different property tastes, meaning you need to adapt
Generation Z - born between the mid to late 1990s and the mid-2000s - will have different property tastes, meaning you need to adapt
I'm smack bang in the middle of Generation Y, otherwise known as the ‘me generation’. Apparently, my fellow millennials and I want it all, without having to put in the effort.
I can’t speak for my entire generation, but I can say that personally, I don’t expect anything to come to me for free – which is why I’ve been diligently building a property portfolio for over a dozen years.
My parents’ generation was very different, in terms of their wants and needs. Back when the baby boomers were entering the housing market, in the 1970s and 1980s, the median full-time male adult salary was $3,588 (1968) and the average housing loan was $7,100, around twice the median wage.
According to CommBank’s Connected Future Report: Is the Australian dream of property still a reality?, around 13% of household expenditure was spent on housing by that generation – far less than the one-third figure that most households spend on their mortgage or rent today – and the average Sydney house price was approximately $16,750.
How times have changed!
Chasing the new dream
Gen Ys are the most recent class to graduate into homeownership, with the oldest of my generation having come of average mortgage-attaining age (32) in 2012. But it’s the next breed of homebuyers – Gen Z – who have the potential to change the game in the property industry, and it’s not when they’re buying that’s interesting, but what.
The ‘Great Australian Dream Home’ is no longer a three- or four-bedroom weatherboard house on a large block for the kids to run around.
Instead, buyers are favouring “an architecturally designed product, as the quality of dwellings has risen over time”, reports CommBank.
“The quarter acre block is becoming a threatened species. Whilst 74% of those living in cities and 81% of those outside capital cities currently live in a stand alone house, 48% of new residential approvals over the past year have been for medium or high density housing,” the report found.
The average site area of a new house in a capital city in 1994 was 802sqm, compared to 548sqm today. However, the average floor area was 162sqm in 1985, 227sqm in 2003 and is 248sqm today – meaning houses are getting bigger while block sizes are getting smaller. Household size has also decreased, from 4.5 people in 1911 to 2.6 today.
“As technology increasingly impacts our lives, society has shifted more indoors and spare bedrooms are utilised for activities such as home office, gym and home theatre,” the report adds.
“As we see a move to larger homes on smaller block sizes, and a move towards medium and high density housing, particularly in capital cities, the backyard is being traded in for bathrooms, and the hills hoist for alfresco dining courtyards.”
These shifting property trends and desires provide interesting insights for ‘buy and hold’ investors, particularly as future generations may be comprised of more renters than ever before. As landlords, we need to cater to our renters’ tastes – now and in the future.
OUR EXPERT
Sarah Megginson is the editor of Your Investment Property and presently has four properties in her portfolio
This article first appeared in MPA's sister publication Your Investment Property
I'm smack bang in the middle of Generation Y, otherwise known as the ‘me generation’. Apparently, my fellow millennials and I want it all, without having to put in the effort.
I can’t speak for my entire generation, but I can say that personally, I don’t expect anything to come to me for free – which is why I’ve been diligently building a property portfolio for over a dozen years.
My parents’ generation was very different, in terms of their wants and needs. Back when the baby boomers were entering the housing market, in the 1970s and 1980s, the median full-time male adult salary was $3,588 (1968) and the average housing loan was $7,100, around twice the median wage.
According to CommBank’s Connected Future Report: Is the Australian dream of property still a reality?, around 13% of household expenditure was spent on housing by that generation – far less than the one-third figure that most households spend on their mortgage or rent today – and the average Sydney house price was approximately $16,750.
How times have changed!
Chasing the new dream
Gen Ys are the most recent class to graduate into homeownership, with the oldest of my generation having come of average mortgage-attaining age (32) in 2012. But it’s the next breed of homebuyers – Gen Z – who have the potential to change the game in the property industry, and it’s not when they’re buying that’s interesting, but what.
The ‘Great Australian Dream Home’ is no longer a three- or four-bedroom weatherboard house on a large block for the kids to run around.
Instead, buyers are favouring “an architecturally designed product, as the quality of dwellings has risen over time”, reports CommBank.
“The quarter acre block is becoming a threatened species. Whilst 74% of those living in cities and 81% of those outside capital cities currently live in a stand alone house, 48% of new residential approvals over the past year have been for medium or high density housing,” the report found.
The average site area of a new house in a capital city in 1994 was 802sqm, compared to 548sqm today. However, the average floor area was 162sqm in 1985, 227sqm in 2003 and is 248sqm today – meaning houses are getting bigger while block sizes are getting smaller. Household size has also decreased, from 4.5 people in 1911 to 2.6 today.
“As technology increasingly impacts our lives, society has shifted more indoors and spare bedrooms are utilised for activities such as home office, gym and home theatre,” the report adds.
“As we see a move to larger homes on smaller block sizes, and a move towards medium and high density housing, particularly in capital cities, the backyard is being traded in for bathrooms, and the hills hoist for alfresco dining courtyards.”
These shifting property trends and desires provide interesting insights for ‘buy and hold’ investors, particularly as future generations may be comprised of more renters than ever before. As landlords, we need to cater to our renters’ tastes – now and in the future.
PROPERTY BY NUMBERS
Baby boomers
Late 1940s–early 1960s
Average full-time earnings of $3,588 and average loan size of $7,100
Gen X
Early 1960s–early 1980s
Average full-time earnings of $43,600 and average loan size of $133,000
Gen Y
Early 1980s–late 1990s
Average full-time earnings of $75,600 and average loan size of $299,000
Gen Z
Late 1990s–early 2010s
Average full-time earnings of $79,700 and average loan size of $316,300
Baby boomers
Late 1940s–early 1960s
Average full-time earnings of $3,588 and average loan size of $7,100
Gen X
Early 1960s–early 1980s
Average full-time earnings of $43,600 and average loan size of $133,000
Gen Y
Early 1980s–late 1990s
Average full-time earnings of $75,600 and average loan size of $299,000
Gen Z
Late 1990s–early 2010s
Average full-time earnings of $79,700 and average loan size of $316,300
OUR EXPERT
Sarah Megginson is the editor of Your Investment Property and presently has four properties in her portfolio
This article first appeared in MPA's sister publication Your Investment Property