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Posted: 2023-06-09 07:08:43

The value of homes in regional New South Wales has plummeted by almost 10 per cent in the past year, the sharpest decrease since before the pandemic.

CoreLogic data released on Friday showed in the 12 months to May, there had been declines in most regions, with house values across regional NSW dropping by 9.8 per cent.

Housing markets also cooled in capital cities, with Sydney's falling 8.2 per cent during the same period.

The bulk of the declines were between May 2022 and January 2023 when Australia's home value index fell 8.4 per cent, the steepest decline in the country's history.

It comes after a meteoric increase in house prices during the pandemic, reaching a record high on May 7, 2022.

The value of homes in some area fell substantially more than the regional average.()

Corelogic's head of research, Tim Lawless, said regional areas that proved popular during the pandemic, including the Richmond-Tweed and the Southern Highlands, had experienced the steepest declines in property values.

"Markets like Byron Bay, we've seen housing values in that market fall by nearly 22 per cent over the past 12 months," Mr Lawless said.

"The Southern Highlands and Shoalhaven have also recorded a larger drop than most other regions, down 16 per cent over the past 12 months."

Mr Lawless put the trend down to more people moving from regional areas to Sydney.

"I wouldn't necessarily say this is a lot of people who have made the regional move and have found it's not quite their cup-of-tea," he said.

"It's probably more people that were already based regionally and had delayed their decision to move during the pandemic.

"So the regional population trend looks fairly similar now as it did pre-COVID, after that significant adjustment during the middle of the pandemic."

CoreLogic's Tim Lawless says more people are moving from the regions to Sydney.()

Agricultural markets higher

Mr Lawless said rate rises had also impacted house values, however rural properties in the west and southern parts of the state held their values better than elsewhere in NSW over the past year.

"If you look at somewhere like the far west and Orana or the Riverina, more agricultural markets, values are just a little bit higher than they were 12 months ago," he said.

"In amongst those regions there's quite a bit of variability as well, the past three months has really started to see the stronger growth conditions emerging from your more commutable regional markets.

"Areas like the Illawarra has seen a 2.7 per cent rise in the past three months and the Newcastle region has seen housing values rise by 1.8 per cent."

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