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Australia’s home prices flatline in May after record run, headwinds gather

By Thomson Reuters May 31, 2026 | 7:04 PM

(Corrects to policy easing, not tightening, in paragraph 2)

SYDNEY, June 1 (Reuters) – Australia’s home prices flatlined in May as higher borrowing costs, the ​Middle East conflict and planned tax changes ‌pushed prices in Sydney and Melbourne into sharp declines, data from Cotality showed on Monday.

The Reserve Bank of Australia has raised interest rates three times this year – in February, ‌March ​and May – to 4.35% to tame ⁠inflation, fully reversing the ⁠amount of policy easing made last year. The conflict in the Middle East has driven energy costs sharply higher, hitting consumer and business sentiment, ​and planned changes to property taxes has prompted investor selling.

KEY DETAILS

• National home prices were unchanged ⁠in May after a streak ⁠of monthly gains, Cotality data showed. ​Prices had been hitting record highs since early 2025.

• House ​prices in Sydney and Melbourne fell 0.9% ‌and 0.8% respectively in May, leading declines, and sales volumes dropped. Advertised listings in both cities have climbed to above average levels.

• Even more affordable markets ⁠in Sydney and Melbourne, which had been lifted by government incentives to help young, first-time buyers, fell.

• Other capital ⁠cities recorded ‌slower gains. Perth prices rose 1.5%, ⁠while Brisbane and Adelaide gained 0.9% and ​0.5% ‌respectively, supported by still-low inventory levels.

• “While ​the speed ⁠of value change remains very different from city to city, the direction is becoming more consistent, with most markets losing momentum as demand-side headwinds intensify,” said Tim Lawless, Cotality’s research director.

(Reporting by Stella Qiu; Editing ​by Neil Fullick)