Australia’s housing market extended its upward momentum in June, with national home values rising 0.6%, continuing a five-month streak of growth. This recovery follows a brief dip earlier in the year and is being driven by widespread regional gains—Hobart was the only capital city to record a minor decline. Quarterly, home values rose 1.4%, an acceleration from the 0.9% increase in Q1, signaling strengthening market sentiment. Falling interest rates since February, coupled with expectations for further cuts, have bolstered buyer confidence and lifted auction clearance rates. However, growth remains moderate compared to the pandemic-era boom.

Supply constraints are reinforcing price resilience, with for-sale listings down 6% year-over-year and 17% below the five-year average. Capital cities have recently started to outperform regional markets on a monthly basis, although regions still lead on a quarterly scale. Darwin emerged as the top performer among capitals with a 4.9% quarterly rise, reaching new record highs, while Perth and Brisbane continued their strong runs. National home values are up 3.4% over the financial year, and if current trends hold, annual growth could reach 5.8%—just above the decade average. Still, affordability remains a limiting factor for how far prices can rise.
