Barossa Properties

Investment

Is Investing in Property Development Risky in Australia?

⚠ General Information Only

This article is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Barossa Properties is not a licensed financial adviser. All investment decisions should be made only after obtaining independent legal, financial, and taxation advice from qualified professionals. Past project performance does not predict future results.

Yes. All investment in property development carries material risk. Anyone who tells you otherwise is either uninformed or not being straight with you.

That said, risk is not a reason to avoid an investment it is information that should inform how you structure your decision, what due diligence you perform, and what independent advice you seek. This article explains the real risks in development investment, honestly.

The Real Risks in Australian Property Development

1. Planning and Approval Risk

A development application (DA) can be refused, modified, or significantly delayed by council. Planning rules can change between the time a site is acquired and the time approvals are sought. Neighbour objections can trigger hearings. These events can materially affect project timelines and costs.

2. Construction Cost Risk

Construction costs in Australia have risen significantly in recent years. Material prices, labour availability, and builder availability all affect the final build cost and cost overruns beyond the feasibility estimate directly reduce investor returns.

3. Market Risk

Property values and rental rates change. A project feasibility modelled on today’s prices may produce different outcomes if the market moves materially before the development completes. Falling sales prices reduce project profit; rising costs compound the problem.

4. Counterparty Risk

The risk that the developer or any party in the development chain (builder, subcontractor, financier) fails to perform their obligations. Developer insolvency, builder collapse, or financing withdrawal can all cause serious project disruption.

5. Liquidity Risk

Co development capital is typically locked in for the project duration often 12 to 36 months or more. Unlike shares, you generally cannot exit early if your circumstances change. This illiquidity must be accounted for in your financial planning.

6. Regulatory and Legal Risk

Changes to zoning laws, council contribution rates, building codes, or tax legislation can all affect a project’s viability. Legal disputes with neighbours, councils, builders, or other parties can cause delays and unexpected costs.

⚠ Capital loss is a real possibility. In worst case scenarios developer insolvency combined with adverse market conditions ‘investors can lose some or all of their capital. This is not a theoretical risk. It has happened. Independent legal advice about the security of your investment is not optional.

How Do Experienced Developers Mitigate These Risks?

Risk cannot be eliminated in development but it can be significantly managed by experienced operators who approach feasibility conservatively:

  1. Conservative feasibility modelling : assuming higher costs and lower revenues than expected, with contingency buffers built in.
  2. Thorough pre purchase due diligence : planning pre application meetings, contamination assessments, services investigations, and flood/bushfire overlays checked before acquisition.
  3. Fixed-price construction contracts : where possible, engaging builders on fixed-price terms to limit cost escalation exposure.
  4. Pre-sales : securing sale contracts before or during construction to de risk the sales outcome.
  5. Experienced council relationships : developers with established relationships and track records in specific councils tend to navigate approvals more predictably.
  6. Adequate financing buffers : ensuring project financing includes contingency for unexpected cost overruns or delays.

What Questions Should I Ask to Assess Risk?

Before investing in any development, ask:

  1. What planning approvals are in place, and what still needs to be obtained?
  2. What are the key assumptions in the feasibility model, and how conservative are they?
  3. Is there a contingency built into the budget? How much?
  4. What is the developer’s exit plan if the market changes?
  5. What security, if any, does the investor hold over the project assets?
  6. What happens to my capital if the developer becomes insolvent?
  7. Has this developer completed similar projects successfully? What were the outcomes?

Risk in Summary

  1. Development investment involves planning risk, construction cost risk, market risk, counterparty risk, and liquidity risk all real.
  2. Risk is managed not eliminated through conservative feasibility, thorough due diligence, and experienced execution.
  3. Capital loss is possible. Independent legal advice about the security of your investment is essential.
  4. Independent financial advice is required to determine whether the risk profile is appropriate for your personal circumstances.

⚠ Important Disclaimer

This article is general information only and does not constitute financial advice, investment advice, or legal advice. It has been prepared for general educational purposes without regard to any particular person’s financial situation or investment objectives.

Investment in property development carries risk, including the risk of partial or total loss of capital. Returns are not guaranteed. Prospective investors must obtain independent legal, financial, and taxation advice from appropriately qualified professionals before making any investment decision.

Barossa Properties Pty Ltd is not a licensed financial services provider under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth).