About the RMX
The REIV Residential Market Index (RMX) is a residential property price index (RPPI) designed to provide a current, simple insight into real property price trends in Victoria. An RPPI measures the price change of the stock of residential dwellings over time.
This week the RMX index fell slightly by 0.3 per cent to 144.7, the House index fell by 0.8 per cent to 167.9 while the Unit index all dropped by 1.1 per cent to 127.2.
The RMX indices performed strongly in 2025 as all three measures rose by at least 4 per cent from the first week of 2025 compared to the last. The Unit index saw the greatest gains, rising by 7.5 per cent compared to the House index which rose by 4.3 per cent. The overall combined index jumped by 6.1 per cent which was a large bounce back from 2024 which saw overall growth of 1.8 per cent while the House index declined.
Why use a Residential Property Price Index?
There are several areas where RPPIs play a role. Because of the importance of the housing market in the Australian economy, RPPIs are of interest to policy makers, market analysts, researchers, and home buyers and sellers for a range of economic and social reasons. They can be used as a macro-economic indicator of economic activity, for use in monetary policy and inflation targeting, and as an input into the Consumer Price Index.
The REIV team developed the RMX as a more frequent, alternative measure to quarterly medians so members can access the latest price movements as they happen.
Medians or RMX?
Both measures have a role to play in understanding the property market. While the medians are an indicator of sale price during a period, the RMX is a measure of price movement over time.
A limitation of medians and simple median indices as measures of price change is that the properties used to calculate a median are only those traded during the period in question. This comparatively small number of properties are not always representative of the total stock of housing. Changes in the mix of properties sold during a period will therefore affect the sample median price much more than the overall median price of the housing stock. For example, if more higher-end houses sell this quarter than last, the median price will rise regardless of whether that reflects what is going on in the wider market.
