Sydneysiders and Melburnians are ditching their cities in droves for the Queensland capital
BRISBANE’S property market has come out the winner as interstate migrants push into Queensland in search of cheaper housing and a different lifestyle.
BRISBANE’S property market has come out the winner as interstate migrants push into Queensland in search of cheaper housing and a different lifestyle.
Ever wondered how some people tend to build wealth and property whilst you continue to battle the bills and life's challenges, never really reaching the position where you can buy an investment property?
Brisbane’s industrial property sales reached $1.43 billion in 2017, which was up a record 54 per cent on the $928.1 million achieved in 2016.
One of the biggest mistakes house hunters can make is to start looking for a property before locking in their finance.
Buying a new house, whether it’s your first or your tenth, isn’t always an easy task.
Even if you didn’t pay much attention to the 2017 federal budget, you may remember how it was presented a little differently.
Demolition crews have started tearing down the old Woolworths building as Ipswich City Council moves forward with the next stage of the $150 million CBD redevelopment.
The Queensland economy is now well into recovery stage after an inevitable slump following the mining boom.
Like many getting-a-bit-long-in-the-tooth Sydneysiders, I've increasingly been having recurring daydreams about selling a place at Bondi or in the inner west and trading it for a mansion at Maroochydore (or sometime it's a mooring at Mooloolaba).