National values fell in June for the first sustained stretch since 2022. But the average conceals the story — this is a market splitting by city, by price point and by asset quality, and it now rewards selection over momentum.
For three years, momentum did much of the work for Australian property investors. That phase has ended. Cotality’s national Home Value Index fell 0.4 per cent in June — the largest monthly decline since December 2022 — with combined capital city values down 1.3 per cent over the June quarter. PropTrack recorded a third consecutive monthly fall, leaving national values 0.9 per cent below their March peak.
Our reading: this is a turn, not a collapse. But it changes what disciplined ownership looks like.
The national number is close to meaningless right now, because the capitals are travelling in opposite directions.
Sydney and Melbourne are leading the downturn — down 3.2 per cent and 2.6 per cent respectively over the June quarter on Cotality’s figures, with advertised supply above average. Buyers in those cities have choice and leverage they have not had in years.
Brisbane, Perth and Adelaide are still rising, but the momentum is clearly fading. Brisbane recorded 19.1 per cent annual growth to May, yet its monthly gain slowed from 0.9 per cent in May to roughly 0.2 per cent in June. Perth, up 25.8 per cent over the year, slowed to 0.7 per cent for the month. These markets are decelerating from strength, not falling. Regional markets remain the quiet outperformer — on PropTrack’s June figures they held steady while every capital bar Darwin softened, with the combined regional median 9.5 per cent higher than a year ago.
The average is now a distraction. Sydney is a buyer’s negotiation, Brisbane is a decelerating seller’s market, and the regions haven’t read the headlines. Every portfolio decision this quarter is a city decision, not a national one.
The first is the cost of money. The cash rate sits at 4.35 per cent after three increases this year, and the RBA’s June pause came with no promise of relief — market pricing implies roughly an even chance of one more increase by year-end. Borrowing capacity has been repriced, and the buyer pool has narrowed most at the higher price points. (Our companion piece, A Pause Is Not a Pivot, covers the rate outlook in detail.)
The second is policy. The Federal Budget’s housing tax changes — negative gearing limited to new builds from 01/07/2027, and the 50 per cent CGT discount replaced with an indexed cost base and a minimum tax rate on gains — represent the most significant shift in investor tax settings in a generation. The likely effect is a material pullback in investor demand for established dwellings, and a re-run of every holding’s after-tax numbers.
The third is the rental market, and it is running the other way. The national vacancy rate held at 1.2 per cent in May, with Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide, Darwin and Hobart all below one per cent, and national asking rents up 7.8 per cent over the year. With values easing while rents rise, gross yields are rebuilding from their lows — the combined capitals now sit at 3.45 per cent, the highest in a year.
Income is quietly reclaiming its share of total return — and income is the part of the return an owner can actually manage.
For owners, this is a hold-and-strengthen market. Tight vacancy and rising rents mean well-managed properties are still improving their income position even as paper values flatten. The work is in the detail: rent reviews kept current, maintenance handled before it compounds, tenancies worth retaining, retained.
For buyers, selectivity is the entire game. The averages no longer protect a casual purchase — but softer conditions in the southern capitals, better yields, and less competition create genuine openings for those buying on asset quality, rental depth and local supply rather than momentum.
For anyone weighing a sale, the calculus is now city-specific. Selling into Brisbane’s still-rising market is a very different decision from selling into Sydney’s correction — and the CGT changes add a timing dimension that deserves proper advice before, not after, the 2027 start date.
And a longer memory helps. This is the sixth correction of the past twenty years. The previous five averaged 5.0 per cent peak-to-trough and roughly 25 months — and every one of them, in hindsight, was an entry window that felt like a reason to wait at the time.
Twenty years of national residential prices as a cycle: growth in gold, corrections circled. Hover or tap a circled window for its story.
Hover or tap a circled window for the detail.
The most likely path from here, on the evidence, is a further loss of momentum and a drift in values rather than a sharp correction — supply remains constrained, population growth continues, and a resilient labour market limits forced selling. But “most likely” is not a plan. The plan is a portfolio that performs across the range of outcomes: income defended, debt stress-tested, quality assets, and decisions made market-by-market rather than off the national headline.
Sources: Cotality Home Value Index, May & June 2026 · PropTrack Home Price Index, June 2026 · SQM Research National Vacancy Rates, May 2026 · RBA Monetary Policy Decision June 2026 & Board Minutes 16/06/2026 · ABS Monthly CPI Indicator, May 2026 · BIS Residential Property Prices (via FRED) · 2026–27 Federal Budget housing tax measures. All figures verified 03/07/2026. General information, not financial advice.
Every figure in this update is freely available. What it means for your property — hold, strengthen, buy, or bring a sale forward before the tax reset — is a judgment call. That judgment is what we do.