The Australian property cycle is the recurring pattern of growth, peak, decline, and recovery that characterises residential property markets over time. Understanding the cycle helps investors time acquisitions and exit strategies relative to market conditions.
The four phases:
Recovery. Following a downturn, vacancy rates tighten, rental yields recover, and sentiment begins to improve. Transaction volumes are low. This phase offers the best entry points for long-term investors.
Expansion. Rising prices attract more buyers, including investors. Credit availability increases, new development is stimulated, and media coverage of the market becomes positive. Capital growth accelerates.
Peak. Supply has caught up or exceeded demand. Yields are at their lowest relative to prices. Buyers are most numerous and sentiment is most optimistic. This is typically the most expensive time to enter.
Contraction. Rising supply, tighter credit, or interest rate increases reduce demand. Transaction volumes fall and prices either plateau or decline in some segments. Investors who entered at the peak experience value reduction.
The challenge. Property cycles are not perfectly regular and vary significantly by geography, property type, and price segment. Sydney and Melbourne can be in different phases simultaneously, and the apartment market often diverges from the house market within the same city.
What most analysts watch. Days on market, auction clearance rates, rental vacancy rates, and listing volumes are leading indicators of where the cycle is heading, more reliable than price data which is a lagging measure.
