Australia’s housing system from the edges inward
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By late afternoon the heat had settled heavily over western Sydney.
Along the Hawkesbury floodplain, newly built estates stretched across former paddocks where insurance premiums have already begun rising faster than wages.
Rows of pale brick homes shimmered beneath a dry autumn sky. Builders were still pouring slabs. Young families were still moving in.
Yet beneath the appearance of expansion, another reality was beginning to intrude. Australia’s housing crisis is no longer only about interest rates, rents or supply shortages.
Climate change is increasingly shaping who can afford to live where, which suburbs remain financially viable, and who absorbs the growing costs of environmental instability.
New modelling from researchers Peyman Habibi-Moshfegh and Associate Professor Nader Naderpajouh at the University of Sydney suggests homelessness in Australia could rise fourfold within a decade under high-emissions scenarios.1
Even lower-emissions futures produced worsening rental stress, declining affordability and deeper inequality.
The findings arrive as Australia’s housing system is already under strain.
National rents remain near record highs. Vacancy rates in many cities remain critically low. Construction firms continue collapsing under cost pressures that intensified after the pandemic and successive disasters.7
Climate change acts less like a separate crisis than an accelerant poured onto an existing one.
For years, public debate around housing affordability revolved around migration, tax concessions and planning restrictions.
Climate risk remained largely peripheral.
That is beginning to change.
Across northern New South Wales and south-east Queensland, insurers have sharply increased premiums following repeated flood disasters.2
In some communities, cover has become difficult to obtain altogether. The Insurance Council of Australia estimates more than one million Australian properties already face some level of high climate risk exposure.8
For households already stretched by mortgages or rents, insurance becomes another destabilising expense layered onto electricity bills, food prices and rising debt repayments.
The effect compounds quietly. Owners in vulnerable regions often face rising maintenance costs, declining resale confidence and growing uncertainty over future lending conditions.
Renters remain even more exposed. Landlords can pass adaptation costs directly onto tenants in tight markets where vacancy rates remain below equilibrium.
The researchers argue climate impacts are likely to reshape housing affordability through multiple channels simultaneously, including insurance, infrastructure damage, labour shortages, disrupted construction supply chains and disaster recovery costs.1
Under some scenarios, home ownership costs could double.
Rental affordability could deteriorate by almost 45%.
In Lismore, the scars of the 2022 floods remain visible years later.
Entire streets still carry the memory of waterlines. Some residents never returned. Others remained trapped between damaged homes, insurance disputes and a rental market already struggling before the disaster struck.4
Researchers and homelessness advocates increasingly warn that repeated disasters create pathways into long-term housing insecurity even for previously stable households.
A flood destroys savings. Insurance payouts fall short. Temporary accommodation becomes prolonged. Rents rise as displaced residents compete for shrinking housing stock.
The process can unfold surprisingly quickly.
Homelessness services across Australia are already reporting greater pressure following climate-linked disasters, particularly in regional areas with limited housing supply.9
Extreme weather also interacts unevenly with geography and class.
Affluent coastal suburbs often possess greater political influence, stronger infrastructure and higher insurance resilience.
Lower-income outer suburban growth corridors frequently carry greater exposure to heat, transport disruption and infrastructure vulnerability.
Western Sydney provides a stark example.
Many of the city’s most affordable growth areas are also among its hottest.10
Residents already facing mortgage stress often absorb extreme summer temperatures in poorly insulated homes while carrying rising energy costs.
Climate change increasingly threatens to reshape the financial architecture beneath Australian housing.
Insurers occupy the front line. Without insurance, banks become reluctant to lend. Without lending, property markets begin weakening.
Researchers have warned of a cascading effect where insurance retreat contributes to declining property values, tighter lending conditions and long-term economic stagnation in exposed communities.11
Some analysts compare the dynamic to forms of climate redlining already emerging internationally.
Australia has not yet experienced large-scale financial abandonment of entire suburbs.
Yet warning signs are appearing.
The Australian Prudential Regulation Authority has already directed banks and insurers to strengthen climate-risk stress testing across their portfolios.12
Financial institutions increasingly understand that climate risk is not abstract environmental risk.
It is mortgage risk. Asset risk. Systemic economic risk.
The political implications remain uncomfortable. Australia’s economy has long depended heavily on rising property values. Entire retirement strategies, state revenues and household wealth expectations sit atop assumptions of perpetual growth.
Climate change complicates that assumption. Some areas may eventually become technically habitable yet economically unliveable because insurance, finance and infrastructure costs become prohibitive.
The burden is unlikely to fall evenly.
The University of Sydney modelling suggests low-income Australians, renters and households already vulnerable to housing insecurity will absorb the greatest impacts.1
Climate change risks hardening existing inequality into geography.
Higher-income Australians possess greater capacity to relocate, retrofit homes or absorb rising insurance costs.
Lower-income households often remain concentrated in more exposed areas because they have fewer alternatives.
Older women remain particularly vulnerable. Homelessness among older Australian women has already risen sharply during the past decade due to insecure work histories, divorce, limited superannuation and rising rents.13
Climate shocks could deepen those pressures.
First Nations communities also face disproportionate exposure. Remote communities frequently confront overlapping housing shortages, infrastructure vulnerabilities and extreme climate risks, including heat and flooding.14
The crisis increasingly blurs distinctions between environmental policy and social policy. Climate change is no longer only about emissions trajectories or ecological systems. It is becoming a question of who retains secure shelter.
Housing policy and climate policy remain largely separated across Australian governments.
Planning frameworks frequently continue assuming historical climate stability even as conditions shift.
Disaster recovery often prioritises rebuilding quickly rather than reconsidering whether some locations remain sustainable long term.
The tension is politically explosive.
Managed retreat from vulnerable regions remains deeply unpopular.
Rebuilding also carries escalating costs.
Following major floods and bushfires, governments often spend billions restoring infrastructure and housing in areas likely to face repeated disasters.15
Researchers increasingly argue that every major housing policy should undergo climate-impact modelling before implementation.
Well-intended policies can produce unintended consequences if climate pressures intensify faster than anticipated.
Large housing developments in heat-prone outer suburbs may expand supply while locking lower-income households into areas with rising environmental exposure and infrastructure stress.
Climate-resilient social housing remains critically underdeveloped.
So does long-term adaptation planning.
Australia still spends substantially more on post-disaster recovery than proactive resilience investment.16
For decades, Australia’s housing system operated on an assumption of environmental continuity.
Floodplains expanded. Coastal developments accelerated. Outer suburban estates pushed further into heat-exposed corridors. Climate science existed largely outside the economics of ordinary housing decisions.
That separation is weakening. Property buyers increasingly examine flood histories and insurance estimates before purchasing. Banks are quietly assessing long-term climate exposure. Local councils confront mounting pressure over zoning and infrastructure resilience.
The transformation remains uneven. In some regions, climate risk still appears significantly underpriced. Many Australians continue purchasing homes in areas facing escalating flood or bushfire exposure because affordability pressures leave few alternatives.
The researchers warn that climate-driven displacement may increasingly reshape internal migration patterns across Australia.5
Some communities may grow rapidly as safer zones attract investment. Others may gradually weaken beneath the weight of repeated disasters and financial retreat.
The social consequences could become profound. Australia has historically treated home ownership not simply as shelter but as security, stability and citizenship itself. Climate change threatens to destabilise all three simultaneously.
By the mid-2030s, Australia’s housing crisis may look very different from today’s version.
The familiar arguments over tax concessions and planning approvals will likely remain.
Yet they may sit inside a broader reality where climate volatility increasingly shapes financial viability, insurance access, infrastructure resilience and human displacement.
The most unsettling aspect of the University of Sydney research lies not only in the projected scale of homelessness. It lies in how plausible the mechanisms already appear.
Australians are not confronting a distant hypothetical future. Many elements of the transition are already visible across flood-hit towns, overheated suburbs and insurance markets quietly recalculating risk.
Governments still possess opportunities to reduce the worst outcomes through resilient housing investment, stronger planning frameworks and emissions reduction.
Researchers stress that policy choices remain enormously consequential. Yet the window for gradual adjustment appears narrowing.
Australia’s housing system evolved during a relatively stable climatic period. The country is now entering something far less predictable.
And beneath the pressure of rising heat, repeated disasters and deepening inequality, the question is no longer whether climate change will shape housing.
It already is.
- Homelessness could be four times higher in a decade due to impacts from climate change, University of Sydney
- Climate Risk Map of Australia, Climate Council
- Homelessness and homelessness services, Australian Institute of Health and Welfare
- Lismore flood recovery and housing crisis, ABC News
- IPCC Sixth Assessment Report, Working Group II
- Australian Government Housing Policy Framework
- Australian inflation and construction cost data, Australian Bureau of Statistics
- Catastrophe Resilience Report, Insurance Council of Australia
- Homelessness Australia reports and analysis
- Western Sydney heat vulnerability research, Western Sydney University
- Climate change risks to Australian banks, Reserve Bank of Australia
- Climate Vulnerability Assessment, APRA
- Older women and homelessness risk, Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute
- First Nations health and climate vulnerability research, Lowitja Institute
- Natural disaster funding arrangements, Productivity Commission
- Climate adaptation and resilience policy analysis, Climate Change Authority









