Australia has officially become the first developed economy to lift interest rates again. The reason is simple: inflation here is higher than in other comparable countries. Cost of living pressures remain stubborn, inflation is running hotter than forecast, and the Reserve Bank has decided to act.

This move hurts in the short term. But for those who understand property cycles, it also creates clarity, opportunity, and advantage.

What Just Happened

The RBA has lifted the cash rate to 3.85%, responding to inflation rising from 3.4% to 3.8%. That’s well above the RBA’s preferred target band of 2–3%. Underlying inflation is sitting at 3.3%, only slightly outside the band, but still high enough to concern policymakers.

The RBA’s job is to slow spending. Rate hikes are the blunt tool used to do it.

The Immediate Impact: Mortgage Pressure

There’s no sugar-coating this. Mortgage repayments are going up.

For existing property owners, this means higher monthly repayments across the portfolio. For many households, that could mean hundreds of dollars extra per month, especially where loans are large or variable.

For buyers, borrowing power has taken another hit.

According to Canstar, this rate increase could reduce borrowing capacity by:

  • ~$12,000 for singles
  • Up to $24,000 for couples

That doesn’t mean buyers disappear. It means buyers become more selective, more cautious, and more strategic.

The Bigger Picture: Property Prices Still Rising

Here’s where most people get it wrong.

Higher rates do not automatically mean falling property prices.

Despite tighter borrowing conditions, the fundamentals remain strong. Australia is still dealing with a severe housing undersupply. New construction remains constrained, approvals are low, and population growth hasn’t slowed enough to relieve pressure.

As a result, property prices are still expected to rise in 2026, with forecasts sitting around 6–8% growth nationally, concentrated in the right markets.

Higher rates may slow momentum, but they do not eliminate demand.

Why This Hike Matters in the Cycle

This rate increase represents a shift point in the cycle.

Historically, interest rates move in waves: tightening, pause, then easing. The expectation is not for ongoing hikes, but rather a short, sharp move followed by a period of observation.

The RBA will now watch the data closely. If inflation begins to fall back, the door opens for rate cuts later in the year.

That’s why this move matters. It may well be the last push before the next phase.

What Smart Investors Do Now

This is not a time for emotional decisions. It’s a time for control.

  • Review cash flow and buffers
  • Stress-test repayments across the portfolio
  • Focus on markets with tight supply, strong yield, and long-term fundamentals
  • Ignore headlines and follow data, not fear

Banks will reprice products, competition will shift, and borrowing strategies will matter more than ever.

The Bottom Line

Yes, mortgages are getting more expensive.
Yes, borrowing power has tightened.

But property remains a long-term wealth vehicle, and Australia’s housing shortage hasn’t gone anywhere.

Those who stay disciplined, strategic, and unemotional through this phase will be the ones who benefit most when the cycle turns again.

This is the first move. Let’s hope it’s the last.