News release

Investment in Asia Pacific multifamily properties to double by 2030: JLL

Multifamily residential to emerge as a major asset class

October 16, 2023

Andrew Peck

+65 9823 7917

SINGAPORE, 16 October, 2023 – Annual investment volume in multifamily residential in Asia Pacific is expected to more than double in size by 2030, with investments to potentially cross $20 billion by the end of the decade. Driven by factors including urbanisation, high renter population, and stretched housing affordability, multifamily residential will transition from a peripheral to major asset class by the beginning of the next decade, according to a report by global real estate consulting firm JLL (NYSE: JLL).

In the first three quarters of 2023, multifamily investment volumes in Asia Pacific have outperformed the broader market. During the first nine months of 2023, investments in the sector reached $5 billion – increasing by 12% year-on-year despite a 24% decline in total real estate investment volumes in the region over the same period. The rise in multifamily transaction activity was led by Japan, the most well-established market in the region, followed closely behind by the China multifamily and Australia build to rent (BTR) markets that have been developing in recent years.

“Investor interest in core multifamily assets has never been stronger. It’s a rapidly evolving market and with more investable products coming into the pipeline, wider participation from institutional investors in the sector and strong fundamentals, we expect demand for core multifamily product in APAC to outgrow investible stock,” says Robert Anderson, Director – Head of Living, Asia Pacific Capital Markets, JLL.

Residential properties designed and built to house multiple households within a single building or complex – often referred to as multifamily residential – are a classification under the living sector, which has been at the forefront of a structural shift as co-living, purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA) and senior living gain traction across the region.

In Japan, the core multifamily universe will continue to expand over the next decade with investors targeting large metropolitan areas, including Tokyo, Osaka and Nagoya. However, as some of the capital sources who can bid on large portfolios have reached their targeted allocation for multifamily, deal activity is anticipated to be most prevalent for smaller quantum portfolios or single assets in the coming quarters.

Momentum for BTR in Australia is growing, driven by a housing crisis following a post-pandemic rebound in migration. Meanwhile, China’s multifamily market is relatively nascent but shows immense potential, with investors growing increasingly active in the Shanghai multifamily market and pushing sector deal activity to record levels. In the next seven years, Shanghai is expected emerge as a top investment destination, benefiting from its scalability and growing investible opportunities.

According to the Institute for Economics & Peace (IEP), 20 of 33 megacities (cities with more than 10 million people) globally are in Asia Pacific, and six new megacities will emerge in the region by 2050, accounting for 55% of overall global megacities. Additionally, the World Bank estimates that the population in the region will increase by 192 million people from 2022 to 2030. Specifically, the number of people aged between 25 to 45 – the key target age bracket for the rental market – is expected to grow by 32 million over this period.

The increasing number of young to middle aged people who gravitate to large cities, coupled with a rapidly ageing population, accounts for the upward trajectory of the region’s rental residential market. As Asia Pacific’s core multifamily markets continue to attract a considerable amount of new capital, this will lead to further yield compression going forward, albeit at a slower pace than the previous decade.

“Conversion plays could be a dominant theme in the Asia Pacific living sector, given the mismatch between supply and demand for rental housing particularly in urban and core locations,” says Pamela Ambler, Head of Investor Intelligence, Asia Pacific, JLL. “As a result, we expect to see more active deployment of capital to convert underperforming properties into enterprise managed living projects to capitalise on this imbalance.”


About JLL

For over 200 years, JLL (NYSE: JLL), a leading global commercial real estate and investment management company, has helped clients buy, build, occupy, manage and invest in a variety of commercial, industrial, hotel, residential and retail properties. A Fortune 500® company with annual revenue of $20.8 billion and operations in over 80 countries around the world, our more than 106,000 employees bring the power of a global platform combined with local expertise. Driven by our purpose to shape the future of real estate for a better world, we help our clients, people and communities SEE A BRIGHTER WAYSM. JLL is the brand name, and a registered trademark, of Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated. For further information, visit jll.com.