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7 Things Chinese Buyers Look for in a Property Listing (That Most Agents Never Include)

A great property with a poorly written listing is an invisible property. Here are seven details that matter deeply to Chinese buyers — and that most agents forget to include.

Why Your Current Listing Template May Be Missing the Mark

Standard Australian property listing templates are built around what Australian buyers care about: bedrooms, bathrooms, car spaces, land size, and a headline price. These details matter — but they represent only part of what Chinese buyers are evaluating. Getting these seven elements right can meaningfully increase your enquiry rate from Chinese buyers.

1. School Catchment Zone — Be Specific

For Chinese buyers with children or grandchildren, school catchment information is often the deciding factor in whether they enquire at all. Name the specific schools, their state or national ranking if available, and whether the property falls within the catchment zone for a selective school. Australia has eight universities in the QS World Top 100 — buyers researching these institutions before beginning their property search will respond immediately to specific school zone information.

 

2. Street and House Number

Numbers carry phonetic associations in Chinese culture that have direct effects on property preference. The number 8 (ba) sounds like the word for prosperity and wealth (fa) and is highly auspicious. The number 4 (si) sounds like the word for death in both Mandarin and Cantonese and is avoided. Numbers 2, 6, and 9 are generally considered positive. If your listing has an 8 in the address, mention it — buyers will notice and appreciate the signal.

 

3. Property Orientation

North-facing aspects are highly valued in both Australian and Chinese buyer markets. Be specific: ‘north-facing living area’, ‘morning sun to the main bedroom’, ‘north-east facing garden’. These details matter and most listings omit them entirely.

 

4. Floor Plan

Chinese buyers — particularly those searching remotely — rely heavily on floor plans to assess a property. A listing without a floor plan is a significant missed opportunity. A clean, accurate floor plan schematic allows buyers to evaluate room sizes, the relationship between spaces, and the flow of the property. If your listing does not include a floor plan, get one created.

 

5. Proximity to Asian Amenities

The location of Asian grocery stores, Chinese restaurants, and Chinese community centres is genuinely important to many Chinese buyer families. A line like ‘five minutes walk to Asian grocery stores and restaurants’ speaks directly to these buyers in a way that generic ‘great lifestyle’ copy cannot match.

 

6. Property Age and Condition

New is almost always preferred over established for Chinese buyers. A new build carries no history and no previous occupants — both positives in Chinese cultural thinking. Note: from 1 April 2025, foreign buyers are only permitted to purchase new builds under Australian law, making this preference also a regulatory requirement for offshore buyers. If your listing is a new build, say so clearly and prominently.

 

7. Investment Credentials

Even family-motivated Chinese buyers want to know they are making a sound investment. According to ATO data, the bulk of Chinese buyer property transactions in Australia sit below $1 million — buyers at this level are still making major financial decisions and want credible investment context. A brief factual investment narrative — suburb price growth, rental yield potential, proximity to infrastructure — adds credibility without overwhelming the lifestyle content.

 

Putting It Together

None of these seven elements require special skills. They require awareness of what Chinese buyers are evaluating and the discipline to include that information in every relevant listing. Work through the checklist on your next new listing and observe the difference in your Chinese buyer enquiry rate.