Skip to content
Building Construction, Government Federal

Worst year for new home builds in over 10 years marks need for action on labour shortages

Master Builders Australia 2 mins read

Experts at Master Builders Australia have warned that low apprenticeship numbers will worsen the nation’s housing crisis if action is not taken immediately.

The warning comes after new Australian Bureau of Statistics data revealed that 2023-24 was the worst year for home building in more than a decade, dropping 8.8 per cent to 158,690 new starts.

“Detached house starts fell by 10.1 per cent, while higher density commencements were down by 6.0 per cent,” said Master Builders Chief Economist Shane Garrett.

“If building continues at this pace, we’ll be in for less than 800,000 new home starts over the next five years.”

“This would mean a shortfall of over 400,000 homes compared with the National Housing Accord target.”

The data release, revealing a drop to numbers not seen since 2011-12, coincided with fresh data from the National Centre for Vocational Education Research which showed declines in apprenticeship numbers.

Apprenticeship completions fell 8.6 per cent from 24,545 in the year to March 2023 to 22,420 to March 2024. In the same period, apprenticeship commencements dropped 11.8 per cent from 47,110 to 41,520, and the number of apprentices in training declined 2.2 per cent from 124,280 to 121,530.

Master Builders Australia CEO Denita Wawn said the new data painted a concerning picture for Australia’s housing crisis.

“Today’s data releases aren’t unrelated. To bring Australia out of the housing crisis we need to drastically increase the supply of housing,” said Ms Wawn, “and we can’t do that while we’re simultaneously suffering through a labour shortage.”

“Low apprentice numbers reflect a shortage of skilled workers across all trades, and until we’re able to address the challenges facing the future of the workforce, we won’t be able to increase building activity and reduce the impact of supply conditions in the residential building market on Australia’s inflation problem.

“It’s no longer appropriate to call for a return to pre-Covid levels, we need more tradies now than we’ve ever had.

“We urgently need governments to look at solutions to increase the number of tradies, increase the number of apprentices, and help Australian builders increase supply so we can come out the other side of this housing crisis,” Ms Wawn concluded.

Master Builders Australia’s “Future of the Workforce: Building and Construction Industry” report, which highlights the growing need for action to increase the workforce. To read the full report click here

 

Media contact: Dee Zegarac, National Director, Media & Public Affairs

0400 493 071 | [email protected]

Media

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Women
  • 29/01/2026
  • 10:46
Domestic, Family and Sexual Violence Commission

Domestic, Family and Sexual Violence Commissioner says we have the evidence to stop the epidemic and need to act now.

The Domestic, Family and Sexual Violence Commissioner, Micaela Cronin, has called for collaboration and urgency in the implementation of the Second Action Plan to…

  • Contains:
  • Government Federal, Oil Mining Resources
  • 29/01/2026
  • 05:29
Cement Concrete & Aggregates Australia

CCAA urges productivity and decarbonisation reforms in 2026-27 Federal Budget

Key Facts: CCAA's Pre-Budget Submission outlines 14 reforms focused on improving freight efficiency and decarbonisation in the construction materials sectorThe organisation calls for improved heavy vehicle access, including Performance-Based Standards vehicles and a National Automated Access SystemPlanning delays and urban development are threatening access to quarries and concrete batching plants, pushing materials further from growth areasCCAA advocates for performance-based Australian Standards and Environmental Product Declarations to support decarbonisation effortsThe submission proposes a production credit scheme for low-carbon concrete, similar to the Green Aluminium Production CreditCement, Concrete & Aggregates Australia (CCAA) has released its 2026–27 Pre-Budget Submission, calling on the Australian…

  • Building Construction, Engineering
  • 29/01/2026
  • 03:00
SourceCode on behalf of Seequent

Research: Data management consuming a quarter of geoprofessionals’ time as AI adoption surges

Key Facts: Geoprofessionals spend over a quarter of their time on data management 80% of mining geoprofessionals rate data management as highly or critically important Only 39% of mining organisations have a defined data management framework 69% of civil geoprofessionals rate data management as critically or highly important Just 30% of civil organisations maintain a formal data chain of custody 51% of organisations now using or considering AI, up from 30% two years ago Geoprofessionals spend a quarter of their time managing data and are increasingly turning to AI, reveals new Seequent survey Mining and civil geoprofessionals rate data management…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.