City Beat July 2025: Brisbane's supercharged unit market continues to boom
The prolonged growth in the Brisbane unit market is becoming quite remarkable.
Unit values rose another 1.1 per cent in July, according to Cotality's latest Home Value Index. They are now over 10 per cent up over the last 12 months, and making it the best performing capital city unit market in the country, just head of Perth and Adelaide. Over the same period, Sydney unit values have seen now growth, and Melbourne units have decline 0.8 per cent.
What makes the continued growth in 2025 remarkable is how well the unit market is performing after 2024, when it grew by over 16 per cent, growth not seen over a calendar year since the 1980s.
The median unit value in Brisbane is now $727,000, the second most expensive capital city unit market in the country, only behind Sydney's $868,000 median.
With strong fundamentals including low supply, growing consumer confidence, rate cut tailwinds, and the anticipation building for the 2032 Summer Olympics, there's no suggestion Brisbane’s unit market won't continue to see strong growth.
What happened in Brisbane’s off the plan apartment market in July?
Developers are looking at any opportunity to get into the Brisbane apartment market.
Veteran builder John Kearney, who runs the successful development company Immerse Projects on the Gold Coast, secured a site in Toowong for his debut Brisbane apartment development.
It’s a location filled with nostalgia for Kearney, who studied at the nearby University of Queensland.
"It feels like a full circle moment," Kearney told Apartments.com.au.
“I spent many nights at the Regatta Hotel just down the road — as have most people in Brisbane. It’s one of the city’s most well-known hotels, and with several cafes, restaurants, and a CityCat stop nearby, it’s become an even more attractive place to live.”
He also noted the opportunity to take advantage of significant view corridors from the new development site: across Toowong Memorial Park, north to the city, and east along the Brisbane River.
Read more: First look: Immerse Projects moves into Brisbane apartment market with Toowong site acquisition
National developer Fortis has also been in acquisition mode, filing for two new apartment developments in Hamilton and New Farm.
They are seeking to develop a boutique block of 12 on Hamilton's Racecourse Road (below), and 74 apartments on New Farm's dress circle Bowen Terrace.
They've had Koichi Takada Architects design the Hamilton project, which is part of a wave of new development that will uplift Racecourse Road.
Read more: Fortis doubles down on Brisbane, files boutique apartment plans on Hamilton's Racecourse Road
More apartments are coming to West End, with Zen Group securing approval for a 200 climate-responsive apartments on Duncan Street.
The two 17-storey towers will have a mix of one-, two-, and three-bedroom apartments.
Designed by Betts + Partners, the development is grounded in a climate-responsive and contextually sensitive approach, aiming to reinforce the emerging identity of the West End Riverside South precinct.
The project includes a 2,600 sqm rooftop offering a comprehensive suite of resident amenities: three pools, a fitness centre, cinema room, private dining rooms, lounges, a library, and wellness facilities including hot and cold plunge pools, pilates, a sauna and a contemplative garden.
Read more: 200 "climate-responsive" apartments set for West End as Zen Group given green light
There was a rare new launch of apartment in July, in the heart of the Brisbane Olympic precinct. Keylin has started taking sales at Oria Spring Hill, located across the road from Victoria Park, the heart of the Games.
Oria will comprise 132 residences across 15 levels in an elevated position on Gregory Terrace, directly opposite Victoria Park, the future site of the Games.
Leaning into its Olympic location, Keylin is introducing unique amenities that cater to changing lifestyle requirements.
Much like the shift developers made during the pandemic to include study nooks and multi-purpose rooms in response to the work-from-home trend, Keylin has responded to the growing popularity of pickleball. Oria will feature a proposed private pickleball court as part of its facilities, one of the first courts in a new residential development across the country.
Keylin understood the prime value of this location long before the announcement that Victoria Park would be the heart of the 2032 Summer Olympics.
The address at 447 Gregory Terrace provides residents with easy access to major transport links, universities, and hospitals. Keylin has already commenced construction on Oria, which is being delivered by builder CoStruct.
Read more: Keylin Group launches Oria in Victoria Park, Spring Hill Olympic precinct
Joel Robinson
Joel Robinson is the Editor in Chief at Apartments.com.au, where he leads the editorial team and oversees the country’s most comprehensive news coverage dedicated to the off the plan property market. With more than a decade of experience in residential real estate journalism, Joel brings deep insight into Australia’s evolving development landscape.
He holds a degree in Business Management with a major in Journalism from Leeds Beckett University in the UK, and has developed a particular expertise in off the plan apartment space. Joel’s editorial lens spans the full lifecycle of a project—from site acquisition and planning approvals through to new launches, construction completions, and final sell-out—delivering trusted, buyer-focused content that supports informed decision-making across the property journey