However, this is not necessarily the end of the rate cycle. The RBA has indicated that inflation remains above its comfort zone, with the board still prepared to tighten policy again if price pressures do not ease. For borrowers, that means the June decision should be treated less like a finish line and more like a planning checkpoint.
The immediate effect is that variable-rate borrowers should not see an automatic rise from this meeting alone. That matters for families already absorbing higher repayments, larger grocery bills and elevated insurance and energy costs. But the broader message is cautious: with inflation still sitting above the 2 to 3 per cent target band, lenders and households are unlikely to assume rates will fall quickly.
This latest development also extends the story from May’s cash rate increase. Borrowers who delayed reviewing their loan after that hike may now have a useful window to act before the next RBA meeting in August. A pause can make it easier to compare current offers calmly, check whether your interest rate is still competitive and consider whether refinancing is worth the effort after exit costs, package fees and application charges are included.
For first-home buyers, the hold may provide a little more certainty when seeking pre-approval, but borrowing capacity remains under pressure. Higher assessment rates, stretched deposits and elevated property prices mean buyers should avoid relying on the maximum a lender is willing to offer. Building in a repayment buffer is especially important if another increase arrives later this year.
Practical next steps include:
- Review your current rate against comparable owner-occupier or investor products.
- Use modelling repayments to test how another 0.25 percentage point rise would affect your budget.
- Check whether offset, redraw or extra repayment features are actually helping you reduce interest.
- Consider discussing with a mortgage broker if your circumstances have changed or your lender is no longer competitive.
The key takeaway is that a rate hold buys time, not certainty. Borrowers who use that time to review, negotiate and stress-test their repayments will be better placed whether the next move is another rise, an extended pause or eventual relief.
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