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Could Melbourne’s Softer Market Help First Home Buyers?

Lower prices may create opportunities, but loan readiness still matters

Could Melbourne’s Softer Market Help First Home Buyers??w=400

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Melbourne may be moving into a rare window for first home buyers, with Domain’s latest forecast suggesting the city’s median house price could fall below $1 million within the next year.
The report points to a possible decline of between 4 and 8 per cent, which would make Melbourne the weakest major capital in the forecast period and mark a notable shift from the rapid price growth seen in many other parts of Australia.

This story is an important extension of the broader cooling-market theme. A softer headline price can sound like welcome news for buyers who have spent years chasing a moving target. But the reason prices are easing matters. Domain’s analysis links Melbourne’s outlook to three interest rate hikes earlier in 2026, weaker buyer confidence, uncertainty around tax settings and a more cautious investor market. In other words, prices may be softer because borrowing has become harder, not because housing has suddenly become easy to afford.

For first home buyers, the practical takeaway is to separate “cheaper property” from “affordable property”. If your borrowing capacity has fallen because lenders are stress-testing repayments at higher rates, a lower purchase price may not fully restore your budget. This is where buyers should run the numbers on repayments, including strata, council rates, insurance, maintenance and a buffer for future rate movements.

Melbourne’s position also looks different from the rest of the country. The same forecast indicates Sydney may also weaken, while Canberra could record a smaller fall. By contrast, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth are still expected to grow, showing that Australia’s property market is no longer moving in one clean direction. For buyers willing to consider units, townhouses or outer-suburban locations, this divergence could create more room to negotiate in some Melbourne pockets than in faster-growing capitals.

That does not mean buyers should rush. A falling market can reward patience, but it can also tempt people into waiting endlessly for the perfect bottom. A more useful strategy is to be finance-ready before making offers. That means understanding your deposit position, checking eligibility for grants or low deposit pathways, getting documents organised and knowing the maximum repayment you can comfortably sustain.

For prepared first home buyers, Melbourne’s softer outlook could improve choice and reduce some auction pressure. The opportunity is not simply lower prices; it is the chance to make calmer, better-researched decisions and compare first home loan options before the right property appears.

Published:Wednesday, 1st Jul 2026
Author: Paige Estritori

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