In Melbourne, the strongest growth has been recorded in established middle-suburban areas including Wantirna, Chelsea Heights, Croydon Hills–Warranwood, Rowville and Dingley Village, where annual price gains range between 6.8 and 7.0 per cent. These are not the city’s most expensive postcodes, but they sit in well-connected, family-oriented corridors that have benefitted from improving affordability and renewed buyer confidence as borrowing conditions ease.
The broader trend data also reinforce how the two markets have diverged and converged over time. Melbourne remains well above its long-term trajectory, with a current median house price of around $1.06 million, while Darwin, at $665,000, is still below its 2014 peak but clearly regaining lost ground. The narrowing gap visible in long-run price trends shows how the national recovery is now spreading to the markets that were slowest to move.
The lift in new listings confirms that sentiment is improving. Listings data across all agencies show Darwin listings up 62.6 per cent month-on-month and 16.8 per cent year-on-year, while Melbourne listings rose 4.2 per cent over the month. Rising supply in strengthening markets typically signals confidence rather than weakness, as vendors take advantage of firmer prices and faster sales.