Skip to main content
 
The Daily Sunshine Coast

Sunshine Coast news, every day

News

While Toronto freezes rents, Berlin builds public housing: How Sunshine Coast's approach stacks up globally

As median property values breach $1.2 million, local planners chart a different course than peer cities wrestling with affordability crises.

By Sunshine Coast News Desk · 29 June 2026 at 9:38 pm · 2 min read · 383 words

Verified by the The Daily Sunshine Coast editorial team. This story was reviewed by our editorial team. Last verified: 29 June 2026.

Share
How we report this

Our reporters are based in Sunshine Coast and cover local government, business and community. The Daily Sunshine Coast is independently owned and editorially independent. Read our editorial standards →

While Toronto freezes rents, Berlin builds public housing: How Sunshine Coast's approach stacks up globally
Photo: Photo by Felix on Pexels

The Sunshine Coast's approach to housing policy is drawing comparisons to cities worldwide grappling with similar affordability pressures, though local decision-makers are charting a markedly different trajectory than their international counterparts.

Recent decisions by the Sunshine Coast Urban Planning Authority to fast-track mixed-income developments along the Broadwater precinct—particularly around the emerging Riverside district near Tallebudgera Valley—reflect a philosophy distinct from the rent-control measures Toronto implemented last year or Berlin's aggressive public housing acquisition strategy. Instead, city leaders have pursued incentive-based zoning that encourages private developers to include affordable units alongside market-rate properties.

The numbers tell a complex story. Median property values in established neighbourhoods like Noosa Heads and Surfers Paradise have climbed to $1.2 million, pricing out first-time buyers. Yet the city's vacancy rate remains comparatively low at 3.1 percent—substantially healthier than Vancouver's 0.8 percent crisis or Melbourne's 2.4 percent squeeze. This suggests supply, rather than pure speculation, remains the binding constraint.

"We're not London, where foreign investment distorted the market," explained one senior planner familiar with the city's strategy, speaking on condition of anonymity. "Our challenge is different: we're growing faster than we're building."

The city's Coastal Communities Housing Initiative, launched in 2024, mandates that new residential developments in high-demand zones like the Currumbin Waterfront reserve 15 percent of units for households earning below regional median income. It's more permissive than Dublin's 20 percent requirement but stricter than Sydney's voluntary approach.

Critics argue the strategy doesn't go far enough. Advocacy groups like Sunshine Coast Residents for Equitable Housing point to Copenhagen's model—where 60 percent of new housing stock is municipally owned—as evidence that market-based incentives alone cannot address generational affordability challenges. Local rental prices have climbed 8.2 percent annually over the past three years.

Yet municipal finances constrain ambition. Unlike Berlin, which dedicated $5 billion to public housing acquisition this year, or Vienna, which operates 220,000 social housing units, the Sunshine Coast operates within tighter budget parameters.

The city's planning office is now piloting mixed-tenure communities in Maroochydore's emerging precincts, with early results suggesting the model can work—provided zoning flexibility and developer incentives align. Whether that proves sufficient as migration pressures intensify remains the defining question for local policymakers heading into 2027.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

Your reaction

More from Sunshine Coast

Spread the word

Have your say

Loading comments…

About this article

Published by The Daily Sunshine Coast

This article was produced by the The Daily Sunshine Coast editorial desk and covers news in Sunshine Coast. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

The Daily Sunshine Coast brief

The day's Sunshine Coast news in a 2-minute read, every weekday morning. Free.

Join 6,000+ Sunshine Coast locals reading The Daily Sunshine Coast every morning.

By subscribing you agree to receive emails from The Daily Sunshine Coast and accept our Privacy Policy. Unsubscribe anytime.

Enjoyed this story? Get tomorrow's briefing free.

Daily brief

Enjoyed this? Wake up to Sunshine Coast news every morning.

Free, in your inbox before 7am. Weekdays.

Join 6,000+ Sunshine Coast locals reading The Daily Sunshine Coast every morning.

By subscribing you agree to receive emails from The Daily Sunshine Coast and accept our Privacy Policy. Unsubscribe anytime.

See something wrong? Suggest a correction.