Who is buying luxury property?
Australia's ultra-luxury property market reveals $663 million in sales dominated by self-made entrepreneurs from tech and e-commerce rather than traditional corporate executives.
Perhaps most revealing is the dramatic shift in buyer demographics. Corporate executives, once the mainstay of premium property purchases, now represent the minority. Today's ultra-luxury buyers emerge from a diverse entrepreneurial spectrum including e-commerce founders, property developers, financial services entrepreneurs, aged care provider founders, fashion label designers, retail business owners, mining technology magnates, and restaurateurs. Of the 20 buyers, only four held traditional employment positions; two from healthcare (including pharmaceuticals and medical devices), one from finance and investment, and one from food and beverage.
While buyers aged in their late 40s to 50s dominate the market, millennials are making notable inroads. The story of Shadi Kord, founder of fashion boutique MESHKI, and her husband Bayan Fanaeyan, of men's fashion label LÈ BAUS, exemplifies this trend. The couple upgraded from a $2.55 million Double Bay apartment to a designer Bellevue Hill residence for $22.75 million. This pattern repeats with other online fashion entrepreneurs like Daniel and Georgia Contos of White Fox, who have similarly leveraged social media influence into substantial property portfolios.
The international dimension adds another layer of complexity to this exclusive market. Five of the twenty transactions involved expat buyers based primarily in Singapore and China, signalling Australia's enduring appeal as both an investment destination and potential future home for the globally-mobile wealthy. The most intriguing figure remains the purchaser of "Alcooringa" itself, described in records only as an "overseas-based expat," highlighting the sometimes opaque nature of transactions at this level.
Expensive homes are changing hands in new ways. Today's ultra-luxury property buyers are primarily self-made business owners, especially those who built digital and tech companies, rather than corporate executives who once dominated this market. The wealth behind these purchases now comes from a much wider range of industries, with online businesses and technology ventures leading the way. Perhaps most notably, there's been a significant drop in buyers using inherited or family money, as first-generation entrepreneurs who built their fortunes from scratch are now the ones acquiring these multi-million dollar properties. This shift toward self-made wealth marks a fundamental change in who can afford Australia's most exclusive neighbourhoods.