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Study: Flood Risk Reduces AU$42 Billion From Australian Property Values

One in six Australian homes face flood risk causing a $42 billion value loss, with a typical flood-zone house worth $75,000 less, worsening housing affordability and insurance challenges.

  • This year, the Climate Council and PropTrack found homes in flood zones have lost $42.2 billion in value, with over two million Australian homes at risk of flooding.
  • Following repeated flood events, including this year’s ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred, Brisbane and flood-prone regions face slowed house price growth after multiple inundations.
  • Region-Specific figures show that a typical three-bedroom, two-bathroom home in a flood zone is worth $75,000 less, with Chelmer and Graceville losing 10.6 and the Brisbane-area dropping 8.7 percent.
  • Immediate impacts include insurance loss and recovery barriers, as homeowners in flood zones find it harder or impossible to insure their houses, leaving costs to the community.
  • McKenzie cautioned that there is no silver lining as climate-driven declines can `trap` buyers and `compounds inequality`, while some coastal areas like Noosaville and Noosa Heads keep value.
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Forbes broke the news in United States on Wednesday, December 4, 2019.
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