Halfway through 2026, Tasmania’s commercial property market is telling a clear story: more deals are getting done, prices are holding steady on the year, and the centre of activity remains firmly in the South. After a solid 2025, the first six months of 2026 have brought a genuine lift in transaction activity across the state’s industrial, retail, office and hospitality sectors, and viewed against the last decade, it’s the continuation of a longer run of growth rather than a one-off spike.
Elders Commercial’s ongoing tracking of the Tasmanian commercial market recorded 141 sales during the first half of 2026, up 33% on the 106 transactions logged over the same period in 2025. All reflecting a level of sustained deal flow rarely seen in a market of Tasmania’s size.
Importantly, this increase in volume hasn’t come at the cost of price discipline. The median disclosed sale price sat at $1.6 million in H1 2026, barely different from $1.59 million over the same months last year. That stability across a much busier market suggests confidence is broad-based rather than concentrated in a handful of large deals. Zoom out, though, and the longer-run picture shows just how far the market has travelled to get here; more on that below.
Retail overtakes industrial, and it’s not a one-off
The sector mix has also shifted. Industrial property, long the engine room of Tasmania’s ‘post covid’ commercial market, has been overtaken by retail as the most active category by volume: 44 retail sales in H1 2026 compared with 36 industrial, a reversal of the pattern seen in 2025.
Median prices eased across industrial, retail and office property, though this reflects a shift toward smaller, more affordable stock changing hands rather than a fall in like-for-like asset values. Large set-piece sales, like 2025’s $50.25 million Glebe Hill Village transaction in Howrah, were the exception rather than the rule in the 2026 data.
Our longer-run market data backs this up as a multi-year trend rather than a single-half blip. Industrial’s share of tracked commercial transactions has held remarkably steady at around a third of the market since 2018 (31.6% then, 31.2% in H1 2026), while retail’s share has climbed from 26% to 35% over the same stretch. Office and hospitality have both eased back over the same period. Retail’s rise has been building for years; 2026 is simply the year it caught up.
170-178 Elizabeth Street, Launceston
The standout transaction of H1 2026 was the sale of 170-178 Elizabeth Street in Launceston, a retail asset sold by Elders Commercial in February. It’s a reminder that retail is not only leading on volume but also accounting for some of the higher-value deals in the market.
The South’s lead deepens
Geographically, the South accounted for 51% of all sales in H1 2026, up from 38% over the same period last year, while the North’s share slipped from 40% to 35%. Read against a single year-on-year comparison, that looks like a sudden swing, but our decade-long market data tells a steadier story: the South has been Tasmania’s largest commercial region every year since at least 2018, consistently taking 42-49% of tracked transactions. H1 2026’s reading is best understood as a decade high for an already well-established lead, not a new phenomenon.
A decade of Tasmanian commercial property
Data from ‘Elders Commercial Market IQ’ from the previous decade shows a market that has re-rated significantly, with the median price for a Tasmanian commercial sale in the first half of the year growing from $407,000 in H1 2015 to $1.6 million in H1 2026; an increase of roughly 293%, or a compound growth rate of about 13% a year.
That growth wasn’t a straight line. Prices moved in a relatively tight band through the second half of the 2010s, generally between $400,000 and $600,000, before a clear inflection point from 2021 onward as the market re-rated sharply: H1 medians roughly tripled from $605,000 in 2021 to $1.6 million in 2026. The past five years, in other words, have done most of the work in this decade’s growth story.
11a Gant Street, Lenah Valley
Investors step back in
Buyer behaviour has shifted too. Among H1 transactions where buyer type was disclosed, investors accounted for 55% of purchases in 2026, up from 39% in 2025, while owner-occupier activity held steady near 29% and developer purchases eased from 23% to 17%. That renewed investor appetite, without a corresponding jump in price over the year, points to buyers backing Tasmania’s fundamentals rather than chasing capital growth.
Interstate and overseas buyers made up a smaller share of the market than last year, 35% of disclosed purchases, down from 42%, but where they did buy, they concentrated heavily in retail: 77% of interstate purchases in H1 2026 were retail assets, a much narrower focus than the spread across retail, hotels, offices and development sites seen in 2025. Interstate buyers also continued to pay a premium over local buyers in both years, consistent with their tendency to target larger, tenanted assets.
Looking ahead
Taken together, the data points to a Tasmanian commercial market that is growing in depth, not just in a single busy half, but over a decade of steadily rising. Layer fresh volume growth and renewed investor appetite on top of that foundation, and 2026 is shaping up to be one of the more active years for Tasmanian commercial property in over a decade of records.
Disclosure: Elders Commercial only reports on transactions in the Tasmanian commercial property market. Elders Commercial provides this information as a public service. We are not purporting that all sales within this report were transacted by Elders Commercial. Where third-party sales are noted, this data has been sourced from industry providers.