Australians holding mortgages face a potential two-year wait for interest rate relief, as forecasts predict three additional hikes in 2026 before any cuts materialize in 2028.
Upcoming Reserve Bank Rate Increases
Analysts project the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) will raise the cash rate by 0.25 percentage points each in May, June, and August 2026. This sequence would mark five consecutive hikes, elevating the rate to 4.85%—levels unseen since the 2008 Global Financial Crisis.
No rate reductions are anticipated until 2028, extending financial strain for borrowers amid persistent pressures.
Factors Driving the Forecasts
Surging fuel costs, tied to prolonged Middle East tensions, fuel these predictions. Experts outline a baseline scenario where the Strait of Hormuz closes for eight weeks, with shipping recovering slowly thereafter.
Westpac chief economist Luci Ellis highlighted the rapid impact of higher fuel and oil-derived prices on broader inflation. “We believe the RBA will respond to this pricing behaviour by tightening monetary policy by more than would have been needed absent that pass-through,” she stated.
Ellis added that the RBA adopts a cautious “once bitten, twice shy” stance on reversing hikes, with potential cuts starting in February 2028—though timing remains speculative.
Effects on Monthly Repayments
Analysis indicates that three 0.25-point hikes would increase monthly repayments on a $600,000 loan (25 years remaining) by about $276. Factoring in two prior increases this year, total repayments could rise by $457 by August.
Canstar data insights director Sally Tindall warned of challenging times ahead. “While other forecasts suggest one more hike, this aggressive path would reach cash rate peaks not seen since the GFC aftermath,” she noted. Higher fuel costs already inflate other prices, prompting RBA action as upward price shifts prove sticky.
Tindall pointed to government efforts halving the fuel excise but cautioned that subsequent rate hikes could offset relief. “This is a forecast, not a certainty—use it to strengthen your finances and mortgage position,” she advised.
Silver Lining in Housing Markets
Prospective homebuyers find optimism as Sydney and Melbourne house prices decline, potentially dropping up to 6% and 4% respectively in 2026. These shifts stem from Middle East conflict impacts and weakening market signals like lower auction clearances and stagnant growth.
Property researcher Cameron Kusher supports these trends, turning bearish on the sector. “The market anticipates at least two more hikes this year, possibly three—pushing rates to 2011 highs or GFC levels,” he stated. With larger mortgages and property values than in 2008, he predicts 4-5% falls nationally, slowing rises in other capitals and potential further declines into 2027 if rates stay elevated.

