Patience pays + Listings surge + Brokers dominate home loans
Markets shift. Forecasts change. But 20 years of data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) has something to say that no economist can argue with.
In March 2006, Brisbane’s median house price was $325,000. By March 2026, it was $1,150,000. Perth went from $370,000 to $1,000,000. Adelaide from $280,000 to $980,000. Sydney from $470,000 to $1,485,000.
Melbourne, often cited as the market that has lost its shine, still went from $330,000 to $850,000 over the same period – a 158% increase.
These are not stories of perfect timing or lucky suburb picks. They’re the result of ordinary people buying homes and holding them through two decades of interest rate cycles, housing downturns and global shocks.
The current environment – rising rates, falling clearance rates and softer conditions in some cities – is part of that same long story, not an exception to it.
The 20-year numbers are a useful reminder of what the end of that story tends to look like.

Listings surge as the market hits a turning point
Something notable happened in May. For the first time in over a year, the number of homes listed for sale nationally is higher than it was 12 months ago.
According to SQM Research, total property listings rose 10.4% in May from April to 258,803 dwellings. New listings are now 12.0% above May 2025 levels, suggesting vendors are returning to the market in meaningful numbers.
But here is the telling part. Five of the eight capital cities – Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth and Adelaide – recorded monthly falls in asking prices.
SQM Research managing director Louis Christopher said the combination of rising supply and stalling prices is “usually an early sign that the market is at a turning point.”
For buyers, that means more choice and less urgency. For sellers, pricing realistically matters more than ever.

Brokers now write 8 in every 10 home loans
Mortgage brokers have reached a record 81% share of Australia’s residential home lending market, according to the Mortgage and Finance Association of Australia (MFAA).
That means more than 8 in every 10 new home loans are now written with the help of a broker – a figure that has grown from just 55.3% in 2018.
So what’s driving it?
Well, home lending has become more complex. There are more lenders, more products and more variables to weigh up – particularly as interest rates have moved sharply over the past few years.
Brokers cut through that complexity. They compare options across the market, explain the trade-offs clearly and are bound by a best interests duty that puts the borrower first. They’re not selling one lender’s products – they’re finding the right fit for your circumstances.
As borrowing conditions become more complex, more Australians are recognising that value.





































