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What Local Leaders Are Really Saying About the Sunshine Coast's Housing and Transport Crisis

As winter demand peaks, councillors, developers and community advocates reveal the tensions shaping the region's future.

By Sunshine Coast News Desk · 29 June 2026 at 10:30 pm · 2 min read · 359 words Updated

Verified by the The Daily Sunshine Coast editorial team. This story was reviewed by our editorial team. Last verified: 29 June 2026.

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The Sunshine Coast's twin challenges of housing affordability and transport congestion dominated discussions this week among officials and experts tasked with steering the region's growth.

At Monday's council briefing, transport planners outlined frustrations over the Sunshine Motorway bottleneck between Kawana and Caloundra. Officials acknowledged that congestion during peak winter tourist season—now regularly reaching 45-minute delays during school runs—has become unsustainable. The council's infrastructure team stressed that without coordinated state and federal funding, the northern corridor would continue to strain under visitor numbers projected to swell another 8 percent annually.

Housing remains equally contentious. Real estate analysts tracking the Maroochydore and Mooloolaba precincts report median unit prices have climbed past $650,000—a 12 percent increase year-on-year. David Low Way developers and Noosa-based property groups have signalled their intention to fast-track mixed-use projects, but local heritage advocates worry about character preservation in established neighborhoods like Coolum and Tewantin.

At Wednesday's business forum, Sunshine Coast Chamber of Commerce leadership acknowledged workforce retention as critical. "Young professionals are being priced out," one representative noted, pointing to rental pressures that have pushed three-bedroom homes in Sippy Downs above $2,400 monthly. The organisation called for state government intervention on affordable housing quotas for major developments.

Meanwhile, environmental groups have renewed calls for coastal protection measures ahead of the 2026-27 storm season. Scientists at the Sunshine Coast University's Climate and Environment Institute highlighted erosion patterns along Alexandra Headland and Caloundra, urging faster implementation of the coastal adaptation strategy adopted in 2024.

On employment, council economic development officers reported that tech and professional services sectors are expanding, particularly around the Sippy Downs business park. However, they cautioned that skill gaps in construction and hospitality persist—sectors vital to regional revenue.

The consensus among officials and experts is clear: the Sunshine Coast stands at an inflection point. Growth remains economically vital, but without decisive action on transport, housing policy, and environmental protection, leaders warn that the region risks repeating mistakes made in other Australian hotspots. Council is expected to table a comprehensive growth management plan in August addressing these concerns.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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Published by The Daily Sunshine Coast

This article was produced by the The Daily Sunshine Coast editorial desk and covers news in Sunshine Coast. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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