SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA / Content Syndication Services / – Australian auction clearance rates fell to their weakest level in six years, with preliminary results showing only 47.4 per cent of capital city homes sold in the week ending June 21. Cotality said the final result will likely settle in the low to mid 40 per cent range as late results are added. That would mark the lowest national auction outcome since April 2020, when the housing market was hit by early pandemic restrictions.

The fall was broad across the major auction markets. Sydney’s preliminary clearance rate was 47.4 per cent, while Canberra also sat near 47 per cent. Melbourne, the country’s largest auction market, held at 50.6 per cent. Brisbane recorded one of the weakest results, with only 33.3 per cent of reported auctions clearing. Almost one in four scheduled auctions across the capital cities were withdrawn before going under the hammer.
The latest figures extend a sharp cooling in auction conditions. Final results for the previous week showed a 48.3 per cent clearance rate, after a 47.3 per cent result in the week before that. More than half of reported homes failed to sell in the week ending June 14. That included homes passed in at auction and properties withdrawn before sale. A year earlier, roughly two in three homes taken to auction were selling.
Clearance rates weaken across capitals
Auction clearance rates are closely watched because they provide an early read on housing demand, vendor confidence and buyer depth. A rate above 60 per cent often points to firmer selling conditions. A rate near 40 per cent shows weaker competition and more unsold listings. The current downturn has followed several months of pressure on household budgets, tighter borrowing conditions and slower activity across parts of the residential property market.
The Reserve Bank of Australia kept the cash rate at 4.35 per cent at its June meeting, after three straight increases earlier in 2026. Higher loan costs have reduced borrowing capacity for many buyers. The auction slowdown has also taken place during debate over federal budget changes affecting negative gearing and capital gains tax discounts. Those changes have become part of the wider national discussion on housing affordability and investor demand.
Withdrawals point to softer seller conditions
Withdrawn auctions were a major part of the weekly result. A withdrawal can occur when a seller decides not to proceed with an auction, often before a public bidding process takes place. The latest figures showed withdrawals made up nearly a quarter of scheduled capital city auctions. That lifted the share of homes that did not reach a successful sale and added to the drop in the headline clearance rate.
The weaker auction result gives buyers more room in several capital city markets than they had a year ago. It also shows a clear change from the steadier clearance rates seen earlier in 2026, when national preliminary results often held closer to 60 per cent. The final rate for the week ending June 21 will provide the full measure of the decline once all auction outcomes are collected and recorded.
