Property investment resources

DHA’s property investment resources are free to access and regularly updated. If you’d like more information about leasing your property to DHA or have any additional questions, please call 133 342 or submit an online enquiry.

On-demand webinars and podcasts

Property management fee comparison webinar

Presented by Oxford Economics, this pre-recorded webinar summarises the results of the DHA Property Management Fee Comparison reports.

DHA property investment webinar

Learn how you can invest with us and the benefits of leasing your investment property to DHA in this pre-recorded webinar.

Smart Property Investment Show podcast

In this episode, Phil Tarrant talks to Luke Jorgensen from DHA to discuss the investing opportunity in providing housing for Defence personnel.

Research reports

Property Management Fee Comparison reports

Learn how the inclusions and benefits provided under DHA’s service fee and Property Care Contract may provide savings over the total cost of leasing through a traditional real estate agent management agreement1.

Property Management Fee Comparison summary (houses)

A summary version of the Property Management Fee Comparison report for detached houses. Download immediately with no registration required.

Property Management Fee Comparison summary (units)

A summary version of the Property Management Fee Comparison report for units, flats, and apartments. Download immediately with no registration required.

eBooks

eBook: Investing the DHA Way

In Smart Property Investment’s latest e-book, discover how DHA provides quality housing for Defence families through investors, and how the financial benefits and property care services offer landlords peace of mind.

Articles and news

Capital spotlight: Adelaide

by Rachael Whiteley-Black | Feb 14, 2019
When the going got tough, South Australia got growing. Here’s why Adelaide is really looking up.

Interstate investors have historically overlooked unassuming Adelaide, but recent political and economic developments in South Australia are focusing a great deal of attention on the picturesque City of Churches. For those with a stake in the local property market, this surge in interest bodes well for 2019 and beyond.

Experts reckon the outcome of the state election in March 2018 gave Adelaide a major boost. The incumbent Labor government, which held power for a record 16 years, lost to the Liberals, and Steven Marshall became premier.

“After 16 years under the same reign, the state recently voted for a change, and it already appears to have improved local sentiment,” says Simon Pressley, Propertyology’s head of property market research and three-time Real Estate Institute of Australia Buyer’s Agent of the Year.

According to Pressley, Marshall’s pro-business platform, coupled with the “halo effect” that usually occurs with a change in government (regardless of its political stripe), has created optimism in both the property market and the city as a whole.

Data from Domain bears him out: median house prices grew a respectable 3.8 per cent in 2018, in contrast to the falls in Sydney and Melbourne. Unit prices have essentially held steady (decreasing a statistically insignificant 0.2 per cent) while rental yields for apartments are sitting at a pleasing 5.19 per cent (investors generally consider apartment yields above 5 per cent to be first rate).

Of course, the new Liberal government cannot take all the credit for the strength of the property market: Adelaide has been developing and diversifying its economy for several years, which has in turn helped strengthen the real-estate sector. Pressley points to an increase in tourist numbers as one major economic driver.

“Rising tourist spending is definitely a significant part of Adelaide’s improving economy,” he says. “The recent transformation of the inner city mixes a modern entertainment and sports precinct with historic buildings and the riverbank.” This gives visitors plenty of reasons to stay – and spend – in town.

Money is also pouring in to Adelaide’s education, research and innovation sectors. The pioneering Tonsley Innovation District south of the CBD has so far attracted dozens of established businesses, start-ups and research institutions, from multinational industrial manufacturer Siemens to Flinders University. Meanwhile, the University of Adelaide has more than 21,000 students enrolled.

More broadly, South Australia seems to have adjusted to the manufacturing downturn that affected it in the early years of this decade. In October, unemployment dropped to 5.5 per cent, its lowest point since November 2012. The Australian Bureau of Statistics says underemployment – that is, not having as much work has you’d like – has also declined.

Analysts think the best may be yet to come. Two massive defence initiatives are set to create a substantial number of jobs in the months and years ahead: the $50 billion Naval Group submarine-building contract; and the $35 billion federal government ship-building program. That’s almost $100 billion in new economic activity for a region already demonstrating strong fundamentals.

“Government spending can have an outsized impact in a relatively small market like Adelaide,” says Domain economist Trent Wiltshire. “The same cash investment will have a bigger effect on median prices in a smaller market, such as Adelaide, than it will in a bigger market, such as metropolitan Sydney.”

Wiltshire believes the city’s economic growth, and the associated growth in population, make Adelaide a good bet for conservative property investors. “It’s safe to assume we’ll see 2 per cent to 3 per cent growth in medians per year in Adelaide in the years ahead,” he says.