Gold Coast 2026: Property Cooling, AI Scams, and Job Shifts Explained
From property cooling to AI-driven scams and a changing jobs landscape, here's what the national noise means for people living and spending on the Gold Coast.
From property cooling to AI-driven scams and a changing jobs landscape, here's what the national noise means for people living and spending on the Gold Coast.

The Gold Coast is not insulated from what's happening elsewhere in Australia, and right now, several converging national trends are landing directly in residents' wallets, inboxes and mortgage statements. Property prices are softening. AI-fuelled identity scams are surging. And a major shift in where industrial jobs are being created is reshaping the local economy. Residents who understand the connections are better placed to act.
The context matters. Australia's property market is undergoing a structural reset in mid-2026, driven by investor retreats in capital cities and a cautious cohort of first-home buyers who are hesitating despite easing prices. That dynamic is not confined to Melbourne or Sydney. On the Gold Coast, where investor-owned apartments have long dominated the Surfers Paradise and Broadbeach precincts, the same hesitation is visible at open homes and in auction clearance figures.
The median house price on the Gold Coast has remained elevated compared to pre-pandemic levels, but growth has stalled materially through the first half of 2026. Real estate agencies operating along the Broadwater corridor and in the Coomera growth corridor have reported longer days-on-market compared to the frenzied conditions of 2022 and 2023. First-home buyer grants through the Queensland HomeBuilder assistance framework remain available, but tight borrowing conditions under current Reserve Bank of Australia lending standards mean many under-35 residents are finding pre-approval harder to secure than the grant itself.
For renters, the picture is only marginally better. Vacancy rates across the Gold Coast LGA have hovered near historical lows for most of the past two years, keeping rents elevated in suburbs like Robina, Varsity Lakes and Palm Beach. The Rental Assistance program administered through Housing and Homelessness Services Queensland provides short-term bond loans and rent relief, but demand consistently outpaces available slots. Residents experiencing rental stress are encouraged to contact the Gold Coast Housing Company directly, the organisation manages community housing across the city and maintains a waiting list that, while long, is the most direct pathway to subsidised tenancy.
The national crackdown on AI-generated impersonation accounts, highlighted this week after Meta confirmed the removal of millions of fake profiles using artificial intelligence to mimic real creators, has a direct Gold Coast dimension. Local small business owners, market stall operators at Eumundi-style weekend markets in Mudgeeraba and Nerang, and tradespeople who rely on social media for leads are increasingly reporting fake accounts duplicating their branding, images and even their pricing.
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission's Scamwatch platform recorded a significant rise in social media impersonation complaints from Queensland consumers through the first quarter of 2026. Gold Coast residents who receive direct messages from accounts claiming to be a local tradesperson, real estate agent or small retailer, particularly if those messages include payment requests or unusual links, are advised to verify identity through a direct phone call before transferring any funds. The ACCC recommends reporting suspicious accounts at scamwatch.gov.au and through the relevant platform's own reporting tools.
The practical steps are straightforward: check that the account contacting you matches the verified profile you originally followed, look for small spelling variations in usernames, and never pay a deposit via bank transfer based solely on a social media conversation without first confirming by phone.
Gold Coast residents navigating both the property question and the digital safety landscape have more resources available than many realise. The Gold Coast City Council's Business Concierge service on Cavill Avenue in Surfers Paradise fields queries from sole traders and small operators dealing with everything from council permits to digital fraud. For consumers with general financial stress questions, the National Debt Helpline on 1800 007 007 provides free, confidential advice from financial counsellors who can assess your specific situation, no appointment needed. The months ahead will require attention, but not panic.
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Published by The Daily Gold Coast
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