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Australia’s home price growth hits lowest in over a year, led by falls in big cities

By Thomson Reuters Apr 30, 2026 | 9:06 AM

SYDNEY, May 1 (Reuters) – Australia’s home prices rose at the slowest pace in over a year in April as higher borrowing costs and war in the ​Middle East pushed prices in Sydney and Melbourne into ‌outright declines, data from Cotality showed on Friday.

The Reserve Bank of Australia has raised interest rates twice this year – in February and March – to touch 4.1% to tame inflation, reversing two of the three rate ‌cuts ​made last year. The conflict in ⁠the Middle East has ⁠driven energy costs sharply higher, hit consumer and business sentiment, and darkened the economic outlook.

KEY DETAILS

• National home prices rose 0.3% in April to a record median value of ​A$940,048 ($668,844), figures from Cotality showed. That was the slowest pace of growth since January last year just before the ⁠start of the RBA’s rate-cutting ⁠cycle that fuelled house prices.

• House prices in ​Sydney and Melbourne both fell 0.6% in the month as more ​stock came to the market. Advertised listings in ‌Sydney stood at 9.4% above the five-year average while in Melbourne they were 2.2% above average.

• Other capital cities recorded a slower but still solid pace of growth. Prices in Perth ⁠rose 2.1%, while Brisbane and Adelaide gained 1.1% and 1.2% respectively, driven by still-low inventory levels.

• Growth is more concentrated in ⁠lower-priced segments of ‌the market thanks to demand from first-home buyers.

• “The ⁠housing market was losing momentum from late ​last ‌year as affordability and serviceability constraints weighed on ​demand,” said ⁠Tim Lawless, Cotality’s research director. “Now we have the additional downside pressure of higher interest rates, sentiment has fallen off a cliff, and rising inflation is set to drive the cost of debt even higher.”

($1 = 1.4055 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Stella Qiu; Editing ​by Tom Hogue)