Australian dwelling approvals fell by more than 10% in March, broadly in line with consensus - though house approvals climbed to their highest level since the end of 2021. Volatility in higher density approvals continues to dominate this data series, posting a 23.4% drop in March. In February, a surge in higher-density approvals (93.4%), likely delayed during the holiday months, came through (93.4%) to drive headline approvals to a 31% rise. RBA monetary policy has turned from a tailwind for housing construction in 2025 into a headwind in 2026. Rates have already risen by 50bps this year and are likely to go up by a further 25bps at tomorrow's meeting.
Dwelling approvals fell by 10.5% in March (-10% expected) to 17.3k, though they rose by 9% over the past 12 months. The result was driven by a 23.4% decline in higher density approvals to 7k, reversing from a large inflow of approvals in February (31%). By contrast, house approvals rose for the 5th month in a row (0.9%) to reach 10.3k, their highest level since December 2021.
More than 51k dwellings were approved across the first quarter of the year, a gain of 2.1% on the December quarter and 28.2% above the cycle low from the March quarter of 2023. House approvals have gradually worked their way up over the past couple of years. Despite capacity pressures in the sector, the dynamics for housing construction were broadly positive: demand for stock was stock strong due to population growth, house prices were rising, and the RBA eventually started cutting rates in 2025.
Even in the first quarter of the year when the RBA was hiking, house approvals still rose by 5.1% to 30.6k. But the cycle is clearly at risk of turning when the lagged effects of monetary tightening take hold, which are likely to weigh on housing construction, a typically interest-sensitive sector. Higher-density approvals were down 2% in the quarter to 20.8k.
Residential alterations - measured as the value of work approved - rose sharply through the past 12 months (15%). There are inflationary effects embedded in that increase; however, the combination of earlier rate hikes, rising housing prices and a tight overall balance between housing demand and supply have likely also been at play.






























