Key facts
- Japan's property market is the deepest, most traded, and safest in the Asia-Pacific region.
- Tokyo's grade A office vacancy rate was 0.7% in Q1, with rents rising 13.2% annually.
- New residential property prices in Tokyo surged 58.5% last year, with prime prices up nearly 160% in five years.
- Japanese investors are significantly increasing their global cross-border commercial property investments.
- Japanese investment in Australian real estate over the past two years equals the total from the preceding 22 years.
- The Australian professionally managed rental housing market is a primary target for Japanese investors.
Japan's property market is currently outperforming its Asia-Pacific peers, demonstrating depth, liquidity, and stability. In the first quarter, Tokyo's prime office spaces reported a minimal vacancy rate of 0.7%, with rents experiencing a sustained upward trend for nine consecutive quarters, driven by strong corporate demand and constrained supply due to rising construction costs and labor shortages. The residential sector has also seen remarkable growth, with new flat prices in Tokyo jumping 58.5% last year and prime residential values increasing by nearly 160% over the past five years, positioning Tokyo as a top global luxury housing market. Even the hotel sector shows resilience, with inbound tourism, boosted by a weak yen, compensating for a decline in Chinese visitors.
Despite these strong domestic market indicators, Japanese investors are increasingly channeling capital into overseas real estate. Data indicates a significant rise in Japan's proportion of global cross-border commercial property investment over the past year, surpassing the five-year average. Notably, Japanese investment in Australian real estate over the last two years has matched the total capital deployed in the preceding 22 years. The Australian residential sector, particularly its professionally managed rental housing market, is a key attraction for Japanese investors, aligning with their established familiarity with income-generating residential assets.
