Australia’s commercial property sector has been through a challenging cycle—rising interest rates, post‑pandemic shifts in office use, and construction cost pressures—but most forecasts now point to a rebound in 2025. Here’s what’s happening and why.
1. Transaction Volumes and Investment Flows Are Poised to Rise
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Institutional and offshore capital returning: CBRE anticipates a 15% increase in deal volumes in 2025, driven by lower rates and large institutional purchases in offices, logistics and retail.
- Diverse capital sources: Cushman & Wakefield note renewed investor confidence, with private and non‑bank lenders stepping up funding, particularly in industrial and alternative assets.
2. Sector‑by‑Sector Performance
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Office: After a multi‑year vacancy spike (~10–15%), the premium end of CBD offices is recovering—anchored by big leases like EY’s 10‑year extension in Sydney—and vacancy is expected to gradually tighten by late 2025.
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Retail: Surging consumer confidence and a renaissance in physical retail (especially neighbourhood centres with essential services) are driving outperformance in retail property returns, with Ray White forecasting retail to lead total returns in 2025.
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Industrial & Logistics: Vacancy remains ultra‑low (~2.5%) and e‑commerce tailwinds keep yields tight. New capital is targeting cold‑storage, last‑mile and data centres.
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3. Macro Drivers Behind the Uptick
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Interest‑rate trajectory: Most analysts expect RBA cuts starting mid‑2025, lowering the hurdle for acquisitions and triggering cap‑rate compression reversal.
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“Welcome home” stimulus: Repatriated offshore funds from wealthy Australians are being channelled into low‑yield, long‑term real estate projects, further boosting domestic deal flow.
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Construction & labour: Despite lingering cost inflation and labour shortages, major infrastructure and Olympic‑related programs in Queensland underpin development activity, particularly in Brisbane precincts beyond the CBD.
4. Outlook & Opportunities
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Overall growth: Cushman & Wakefield and Knight Frank both predict a stabilisation of valuations in 2025, followed by a multi‑year recovery—Cushman forecasts an eventual 20% rebound by 2030.
- Target strategies: Value‑add and opportunistic plays—upgrading older offices, repositioning retail centres, or entering off‑market industrial deals—are likely to deliver the strongest early‑mover returns.
Key Takeaways for Investors
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Prepare now for rate cuts: have due diligence and financing lined up to capitalise when borrowing costs fall.
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Focus on quality: core CBD offices, prime retail hubs and specialised industrial assets offer the most immediate upside.
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Be patient: while transactions pick up in 2025, full valuation recovery will be gradual—plan for a 3–5‑year horizon.
In summary, the aggregate picture for Australian commercial property in 2025 is one of renewed growth. After a period of reset, lower interest costs, returning capital, and sector‑specific resilience are all aligning to fuel a rebound. Investors who position themselves today—especially in the highest‑quality assets—stand to benefit as markets steadily recover.
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