Growing children and booming opportunities

Published on: 21/10/2021

As the demand for childcare grows, so too does the demand for childcare real estate, with government rebates and social and demographic changes underpinning the success of these assets.

While sales volumes have remained subdued across most commercial property sectors since the start of the pandemic, it’s been a different story for childcare.

After a lull in sales following the initial Covid-19 outbreak, the number of childcare assets selling bounced back strongly, hitting a record high in the second half of 2020.

Sales activity has remained strong this year, with volumes recently bolstered by the $98m sale of a portfolio of 12 childcare assets located across Victoria and Western Australia to Home Consortium’s ASX-listed HealthCo Healthcare and Wellness REIT. Developed by Allaf Property, this is the largest childcare portfolio to transact in Australia and was handled by CBRE, Burgess Rawson and Savills.

Currently, the total value of Australia childcare real estate is around $28bn, according to estimates by JLL, and it’s predicted to grow even further. Last financial year, an extra 297 childcare centres were added, bringing the total to 8322 according to the Australian Children’s Education and Care Quality Authority. There are an estimated 400 additional centres at various stages in the development pipeline.

Childcare centres were one of only a few sectors to see yields fall in 2020, with growing competition combined with low interest rates accelerating price growth. Across metro and regional Australia, initial yields on childcare centres averaged 5.3 per cent in August, according to JLL, down over 100 basis points from the 12 months prior.

Depending on the location, quality and tenant, however, yields can be considerably higher or lower than this. In September, for example, three different childcare centres sold at staggering sub-4 per cent yields. All three were located in NSW with long leases in place.

Looking at sales from the past 12 months, the price tag on a childcare centre ranged from just $1m to well above $10m. Part of the success of these assets relates to their broad appeal, both in relation to budget and also investor type, from smaller privates to ASX-listed funds.

Growing demand for childcare property has been clearly evident on realcommercial.com.au.

Among those looking to buy development sites, “childcare” has been the most used keyword accompanying searches over each of the past six months, overtaking “residential”, which previously held the crown.

Childcare was also the most searched keyword in the medical and consulting category, and has steadily risen up the ranks in office and retail searches. According to the Department of Education, there were 1.3 million children attending a subsidy-approved childcare in March 2020, 60 per cent of which were enrolled in a centre-based daycare.

This number is predicted to rise due to population growth and an increase in the proportion of twoworking-parent households. In 2011, 39 per cent of children five or under attended childcare. By 2020, this had risen to 45 per cent.

Government grants are another boon for the sector. The most recent federal budget introduced a $1.7bn subsidy to help families with multiple children under school age attend childcare. It also removed the $10,560 subsidy cap on high-income earning families.

These changes should fuel increased demand for childcare places, and further support a class of property that has proved extremely resilient throughout the pandemic.

Anne Flaherty, The Australian

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