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Melbourne Real Estate Market Forecast for 2026

01.04.2026
Buyer's Guide

A practical look at where Melbourne’s property market may be headed in 2026, including prices, supply, buyer demand, and what it could mean for sellers and first-home buyers.

Melbourne residential homes

Melbourne’s Property Market in 2026

Melbourne’s real estate market looks set for a steadier year in 2026 than some of the stronger-performing capitals.

That does not mean the market is weak. It means Melbourne is moving through a different stage of the cycle. Prices are still rising, but at a more measured pace, and buyers generally have more choice than they do in tighter markets.

For many people, that may actually be the most important part of the 2026 outlook. This is not shaping up to be a market defined purely by urgency. It looks more like a market where preparation, timing, and property selection will matter more than speed alone.

Price Growth Looks More Likely Than a Sharp Boom

Most forecasts suggest Melbourne should see some upward pressure on prices in 2026, but the scale of that growth is less certain.

More optimistic forecasts point to a stronger recovery, supported by lower rates, improved household confidence, and renewed first-home buyer activity. More cautious views suggest Melbourne could remain softer than expected if borrowing conditions stay tight and cost-of-living pressure continues to weigh on demand.

The more realistic takeaway is that Melbourne may keep moving upward, but probably without the kind of runaway pace seen recently in some other cities. In that sense, 2026 may be less about a dramatic surge and more about gradual reacceleration.

Supply Is One of the Big Reasons Melbourne Feels Different

One of Melbourne’s more important market characteristics right now is supply.

There are more properties on the market, and buyers often have more room to compare options instead of rushing into decisions. That tends to reduce the kind of extreme competition that pushes prices sharply higher in a short period.

This does not mean quality homes are sitting around. Well-presented, well-priced properties can still attract strong interest. But the broader market feels less compressed, which creates a very different buying environment from one where listings are scarce and every home becomes a bidding war.

Houses and Units May Not Move the Same Way

Affordability is likely to keep shaping demand in 2026.

As borrowing remains a real constraint for many households, more affordable segments of the market may continue to attract attention. That could support stronger relative demand for units and entry-level homes, especially among first-home buyers and more budget-conscious upgraders.

Houses still hold their appeal, especially in well-established suburbs, but the gap between aspiration and affordability remains part of the story. In practical terms, buyers may become more selective, and value-for-money may matter even more than it did a few years ago.

What This Could Mean for Buyers

For buyers, the 2026 market may offer something that has felt rare at times in recent years: a little more breathing room.

That does not mean every purchase will be easy. Good homes in good areas can still move quickly. But it does mean buyers may have more chance to compare stock, negotiate with more confidence, and avoid making rushed decisions purely out of fear of missing out.

For first-home buyers especially, that matters. If prices rise only moderately while stock remains relatively healthy, Melbourne could remain one of the more approachable major-city markets for people trying to enter the market carefully.

What This Could Mean for Sellers

For sellers, 2026 may be a year where strategy matters more than momentum.

In a market with more supply, pricing needs to be realistic from the start. Presentation matters. So does understanding what buyers in your segment are actually comparing your property against.

The strongest result may still go to the best homes, but sellers should not assume that general market growth alone will do the work for them. In a more balanced environment, quality and pricing discipline become more visible.

The Broader Outlook

The biggest theme for Melbourne in 2026 is not just whether prices rise.

It is how the market behaves while they rise.

At the moment, the city appears to be in a more balanced position than some other capitals. Demand is still there. So is buyer caution. Supply remains an important moderating factor. And the broader economic backdrop still matters, especially interest rates, inflation, and household confidence.

That combination makes Melbourne’s 2026 outlook more nuanced than a simple bullish or bearish headline.

Final Thoughts

Melbourne’s real estate market in 2026 looks likely to be firmer than flat, but more measured than overheated.

For buyers, that could create a better environment for thoughtful decisions. For sellers, it may reward careful pricing and strong presentation rather than overconfidence. And for anyone watching the market from the sidelines, the key point is this: Melbourne does not currently look like a city being driven by panic or scarcity alone.

It looks like a market slowly rebuilding momentum, with enough supply and enough caution to keep conditions relatively balanced.

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