Australian dwelling approvals surged in February to their highest level since mid-2021, rebounding sharply from large declines around the turn of the year. Headline approvals jumped almost 30% month-on-month, following falls of 14.2% in December and 7.2% in January - nearly five times the expected rise of 6.2%. An inflow of unit approvals, notably in Victoria, was the key driver of today's outcome, with many approvals likely to have been held over from the summer holiday period. House approvals were broadly flat. Approvals lifted through 2025 helped by the RBA's easing cycle, but with that now reversing to a hiking cycle this momentum faces headwinds.
National dwelling approvals jumped by 29.7% in February, their largest month-on-month rise in 4 years to reach their highest level (19,022) since August 2021. By category, the volatile unit or higher-density segment (9,071) surged by around 94%, boosted by a huge volume of approvals from Victoria (429%) that were likely backlogged from the preceding months. House or detached approvals (9,951) - a much more stable category - were essentially unchanged (-0.2%).
Across the past 3 months, headline approvals have averaged 16,500, with house approvals having gradually trended up to 9,900 - their highest since August 2022. The 3-month average for unit approvals is 6,600, around the middle of its range from the past year or so.
The underlying detail showed broad increases across the range of higher-density approvals, with high-rise and townhouses the main contributors.
As highlighted earlier, Victoria was the key driver where higher-density approvals rose well in excess of 400%. In the Victorian capital, unit approvals climbed to their highest level in 12 months. Unit approvals also increased very sharply in Western Australia (163%) and Queensland (102%).




























