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Market Intelligence · Mid-Year 2026

Perth Property Market 2026:
What Changed Since the Budget
— and What It Means for Investors

Dwelling values up 24%. Vacancy at 0.5%. But the May 2026 federal budget changed the rules for investors — materially and permanently. Here is the complete picture.

+24.3%
Annual Dwelling Growth
Cotality · Mar 2026
$845K
Median House Price
REIWA · Apr 2026
0.5%
Vacancy Rate
SQM Research · Apr 2026
+1.6%
May 2026 Monthly Growth
Cotality · 28-day rolling
$700
Median Weekly Rent
REIWA · Apr 2026
14
Days on Market
REIWA · Apr 2026
Perth is still the strongest property market in Australia. But the May 2026 federal budget changed the rules for investors — and the investors who act without understanding what changed are the ones who will feel it most.
Section 01

The Perth Market at Mid-Year 2026

While Sydney fell 0.7% and Melbourne fell 0.6% in May 2026, Perth grew another 1.6% in a single month. That is not a coincidence — it is a structural story driven by population growth, a resources economy, and a housing supply shortfall that has been building for years.

Table 1 — Perth Property Market Snapshot · Mid-Year 2026 REIWA / Cotality / SQM
MetricFigureSource
Median house price$845,000REIWA · Apr 2026
Median dwelling value$1,017,698Cotality · Mar 2026
Annual dwelling growth+24.3% YoYCotality
Monthly growth (May 2026)+1.6%Cotality · 28-day
Unit annual growth+26.1%Cotality
Days on market (houses)~14 daysREIWA · Apr 2026
Active listings vs 5-yr avg40–45% belowREIWA
Vacancy rate~0.5%SQM · Apr 2026
Median weekly rent (houses)$700 pwREIWA · Apr 2026
Median weekly rent (units)$670–$680 pwREIWA · Apr 2026
Gross rental yield (houses)~4.3%REIWA
Gross rental yield (units)~5.9%REIWA
Section 02

What the May 2026 Federal Budget Changed

The budget did three things that every investor must understand before their next acquisition decision.

Change 01

Negative Gearing Removed for Established Homes

New established residential purchases no longer qualify for negative gearing deductions against other income. Pre-budget purchases retain existing rules.

From 1 July 2027
Change 02

CGT Discount Replaced by Indexation

The 50% CGT discount is replaced with cost-based indexation. Investors pay tax only on gains above inflation — changing the after-tax return profile significantly.

From 1 July 2027
Change 03

Trust Tax Rate Increases to 30%

Discretionary trusts used as investor structures face a new 30% tax rate. Investors holding property through family trusts must review their structure now.

From 1 July 2028
Table 2 — Federal Budget 2026: Key Tax Changes for Property Investors
ChangeDetailEffective DateImpact
Negative gearing removedEstablished residential purchases post-budget no longer qualify1 Jul 2027High
CGT discount replaced50% discount replaced by cost-based indexation1 Jul 2027High
Trust tax rate increaseNew 30% rate for discretionary trusts1 Jul 2028Medium
Pre-budget purchasesExisting negative gearing rules fully retainedOngoingRetained
!

Analysts estimate a 10–20% reduction in borrowing capacity for investors and a ~34% drop in new investor engagement following these budget changes. Auction clearance rates dropped to 43.1% nationally post-budget, with transaction volumes estimated to fall ~20%.

Not sure how these changes affect your specific position? A discovery call covers your cashflow, structure, and sequencing plan.

Book a Discovery Call →
Section 03

Why Perth’s Vacancy Rate Is Still Under 1%

A balanced rental market sits at approximately 3% vacancy. Perth at 0.5% is not a tight market — it is structurally landlord-dominant, and has been for several years. Understanding why matters for every investment decision made in this environment.

Fewer than 1,000 rental properties are available across the entire Perth metro at any given time. This is not a rounding error. It is a structural feature of the market.

— SQM Research / REIWA, April 2026
Table 3 — Perth Rental Vacancy: Supply vs Demand Drivers
↑ Demand Drivers
Population growthPerth +2.4% YoY — highest of any capital
Interstate migrationStrong inflow from NSW and VIC continuing
Resources employmentIron ore, lithium, LNG — WA lithium $8.4B in sales 2023–24
Affordability pressureMedian house ~$845K pushing buyers into rentals longer
↓ Supply Constraints
New home completions~22,600 in 2024–25 — well below population demand
Listing volumes40–45% below the 5-year average
Available rentals1,936 at end Feb 2026 — 7.2% lower YoY
Days to lease14–16 days median; some managers reporting 8 days

What 0.5% Vacancy Means for Landlords

Record median rents of $700 per week for houses and $670–$680 per week for units. Median days to lease of approximately 14–16 days. Further upward rent pressure expected in inner and middle ring suburbs. For existing landlords with well-located established properties, this environment is as favourable as it has been in living memory.

Section 04

What This Means for Investors Right Now

The budget changes the calculation. It does not change the structural case for Perth. But it demands that every investor approach decisions with a clearer strategy than was needed in 2023 or 2024, when the market was doing much of the work for them.

Table 4 — Perth Investor Strategy Guide · Post Budget 2026
SituationRecommended ApproachDirection
Existing established property, pre-budget purchaseHold — existing negative gearing rules retained; tight market supports rent growthHold
New established property purchaseModel cashflow without negative gearing offset — prioritise yield and location above allReview
Positively geared or near-neutral assetStrong fundamentals still support acquisition with clear portfolio blueprintBuy
Deeply negative geared, poor location, low yieldExiting may be prudent under the new tax regime — review with accountantCaution
Trust structure currently in useSeek qualified accountant advice on restructuring before 1 July 2028Act Now
New build or development siteReview tax treatment — may retain advantages not available for established stockReview

The Three Strategic Shifts That Matter Most

Cashflow modelling is now non-negotiable. With gross yields averaging 3.6–4.3% on houses and investor mortgage rates in the low-to-mid 6% range, established house investments are already operating at a cashflow deficit for many investors. Remove negative gearing from that equation — as the new rules require — and cashflow becomes the primary lens through which every acquisition must be evaluated.

Yield deserves more weight than it has been given. Units and townhouses in Perth currently generate gross yields of approximately 5.9% — materially higher than the 4.3% available on houses. In an environment where negative gearing is no longer available for new established purchases, assets that generate stronger rental income become structurally more attractive.

Location selection has become a more important differentiator. Inner and middle ring suburbs with strong transport connections — along the Ellenbrook, Yanchep, and Thornlie-Cockburn lines — continue to show tight vacancy and fast leasing times. Greenfield sites on the outer fringe face rising competition from new supply and should be approached with considerably more caution.

The right strategy depends on your income, equity, existing structure, and timeline. That is exactly what a discovery call with Enrich covers.

Book a Discovery Call →
Section 05

The Investor Checklist for Mid-Year 2026

Before making any decision — buy, hold, or sell — work through every item below.

Pre-Decision Checklist — Perth Property 2026

Have you recalculated your investment’s annual cashflow position assuming no negative gearing offset for new established purchases from 1 July 2027?

Have you reviewed your holding structure with a qualified accountant in light of the trust tax changes effective from 1 July 2028?

Is your property located in an area with strong transport access and structural rental demand, or in a greenfield site with rising supply competition?

Are you prioritising yield alongside capital growth in your acquisition criteria — not treating yield as an afterthought?

Are you across Western Australia’s tenancy reforms — rent increase rules, minimum standards, safety compliance — to avoid regulatory risk eroding your returns?

Do you have a sequencing plan for your portfolio — not just a view on the next purchase, but how each acquisition positions you for the next?

Section 06

Frequently Asked Questions

Does negative gearing still apply to Perth investment properties purchased before the budget?

Yes. Properties purchased before the May 2026 budget announcement retain existing negative gearing rules in full. Only new established residential properties purchased after the budget date are subject to the new regime from 1 July 2027.

Will Perth property prices fall after the budget?

Most analysts and valuers expect price growth to moderate — from mid-20s annual growth into high single digits — rather than fall outright. Perth’s structural fundamentals including 0.5% vacancy, population growth of 2.4% per year, and a supply shortfall of approximately 40% below historic averages remain intact.

Are units better investments than houses in Perth right now?

Units currently offer gross rental yields of approximately 5.9% compared to approximately 4.3% for houses. In an environment where negative gearing is removed for new established purchases, higher-yielding assets provide better cashflow support. However, location, quality, and body corporate structure all matter — well-located middle ring units are very different investments from off-the-plan apartments in oversupplied areas.

How does the CGT indexation change affect long-term Perth investors?

The replacement of the 50% CGT discount with cost-based indexation means investors pay tax only on gains above inflation rather than receiving a flat 50% reduction on the total gain. The precise impact depends on individual holding periods, purchase prices, and inflation outcomes. Speak with a qualified accountant to model this for your specific position.

Should I buy in Perth before the negative gearing rules change on 1 July 2027?

The timing of an acquisition should be driven by your strategy, your financial position, and whether the asset fits your portfolio blueprint — not a tax deadline alone. That said, the pre-July 2027 window does preserve access to existing negative gearing rules for established property purchases made before that date. The right answer is specific to your income, equity, and portfolio sequencing plan.

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