
Australian household wealth went up 2.5% in the final quarter of 2025, adding a staggering $453.7 billion to the nation’s private balance sheets.
According to the latest data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, the spike was primarily underpinned by the unrelenting momentum of the residential property market.

The total value of land and dwellings climbed 3.2% ($368.6 billion), single-handedly accounting for 2 percentage points of the overall growth.
While superannuation assets provided a modest 0.3 percentage point boost, the real estate sector remained the undisputed engine of domestic prosperity.
Dr Mish Tan, the ABS head of finance statistics, noted that rising valuations continue to redefine the financial landscape.
"The mean price of residential dwellings rose 2.7% this quarter," Dr Tan stated, highlighting particularly aggressive growth across Western Australia, Queensland, and South Australia.
However, the accumulation of wealth was partially offset by a 2% rise in household borrowing, which shaved 0.3 percentage points off the final growth figures.

Total credit demand reached $142.4 billion, a sharp escalation driven largely by a $63.3 billion appetite from households.
This marked the strongest growth in housing loan balances since late 2021, a trend Dr Tan attributes to recent policy shifts.
"New loan commitments, particularly for first home buyers, are now flowing through to the broader debt profile," she explained.
Despite the increase in liabilities, the sheer scale of property appreciation ensured that Australian households ended the year on a stronger financial footing.