Home prices cool as rents rise

The cost of buying a home in two big Australian cities has dropped, but rents are likely to continue rising over the coming months.

By AAP & CBA Newsroom

1 June 2026

Home for sale. Photo: AAP photos.

Key points

  • Dwelling values fell 0.9 per cent in Sydney, 0.8 per cent in Melbourne and 0.2 per cent in the ACT in May
  • Perth and Darwin posted the strongest monthly price increases at 1.5 per cent
  • Rents rose 0.6 per cent nationally in May as vacancy rates remained low
  • Auction clearance rates have reached a new cyclical low following the tax changes 

 

Home prices are falling in Australia's two largest cities as high interest rates and investor tax changes put pressure on an already soft market.

Dwelling values fell 0.9 per cent in Sydney, 0.8 per cent in Melbourne and 0.2 per cent in the ACT during May, according to data released by research agency Cotality on Monday. 

While prices rose in other state and territory capitals, the growth was weaker than previously seen.

Cotality research director Tim Lawless said some of the weakness was part of the regular housing price cycle, but other factors were also playing a role. 

"Late last year it was more about affordability and serviceability challenges as housing prices were outpacing incomes," he told AAP.

"Then towards the end of last year we started to see inflation accelerating, the RBA taking a more hawkish stance - that was a blow to confidence - and from there we saw interest rates starting to rise, global oil shock and now a budget has been handed down." 

Perth and Darwin posted the strongest monthly price increases at 1.5 per cent, followed by Brisbane and Hobart at 0.9 per cent and Adelaide at 0.5 per cent.

Sydney's median dwelling price stands at $1,282,020, while the figure in Melbourne is $812,621. 

Price growth was stronger outside the capital cities, with regional Western Australia leading the way at 1.9 per cent in May and 22.7 per cent annually.

Rents expected to keep rising 

Around the country, rents rose 0.6 per cent in May, which was the same as their April reading but slightly less than the first three months of 2026.

A very low national vacancy rate of 1.5 per cent - meaning demand for rental properties is high - was likely to keep pushing up rents over the coming months, the Cotality report warned. 

Mr Lawless said the government's decision to restrict key investor incentives to new homes would likely slow their spending, but it was too early to see any significant impacts in the national data.

"Looking forward, absolutely we expect there to be less investment in the housing market and we'll see a pullback in overall transactional activity," he said. 

Auction clearance rates - considered a useful leading indicator for future property price rises - have reached a "new cyclical low" following the announcement of the tax changes, according to separate Cotality data.

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