More properties languish on the market as buyers get the jitters

💰 Ekonomi 📰 Sydney Morning Herald 🕐 1 saat önce
More properties languish on the market as buyers get the jitters

The number of homes on the market for longer periods of time has jumped sharply across the country. Experts say this is what is behind it.

Stubborn sellers and nervous buyers are responsible for a sharp increase in the number of Australian homes languishing on the market for six months or more, experts say.

In May, 73,820 properties nationally had been on market for 180 days or longer, representing a monthly increase of 10.5 per cent, according to SQM Research.

So-called ‘old listings’ accounted for 28.52 per cent of the entire property market in that period, on SQM data.

The rise was not uniform across the capital cities: old listings increased a substantial 13.4 per cent in Canberra, 10.2 per cent in Sydney and 9.0 per cent in Melbourne, but rose a modest 3.6 per cent in Perth and 0.6 per cent in Hobart.

Louis Christopher, managing director at SQM, said property listings generally went stale when sellers stuck to unrealistic pricing expectations.

“In the vast majority of cases it’s because the vendor has not only mispriced the property, but also won’t respond to buyer feedback.”

Christopher said old listings data was a reliable proxy for the health of the property market.

“In an ‘up’ market, overpriced properties will eventually get bought as the market catches up to the asking price. But in a ‘down’ market, that doesn’t happen, and those overpriced properties linger for longer and longer.”

While the number of old listings nationally rose over the month, it was down 10.8 per cent nationally over the year to May, which Christopher said illustrates his point.

“In the back half of 2025, we saw the introduction of the first-home-buyers’ scheme and the flow-on effects of interest rate cuts, which stimulated the market and led to an absorption of stock that might have otherwise gone unsold.

“This year, with rates rising and other factors dampening the market, old stock numbers are rising again. In time, maybe as soon as next month, I think we will see a year-on-year increase.”

In Sydney, old listings were down 3.3 per cent over the year to May, while in Melbourne, it was 7.1 per cent.

Christopher said the upward trend should serve as a warning to sellers.

“The message is that if you don’t meet the market, you’re not going to sell your property, and you’re going to end up being a statistic on our database.”

Jarrod McCabe, director of Wakelin Property Advisory, said hesitant buyers were contributing to a build-up of old stock in Melbourne.

“In an uncertain time like we’re in at the moment, buyers tend to sit on their hands. Demand has certainly come off the boil, and the buyers who are still inspecting properties are generally holding back.”

With fewer buyers active in the market,

#market

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