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RBA cash rate 2026: where it sits, where it's going, and your mortgage

Numbers updated… · sources
TL;DR

The RBA cash rate sits at 3.85% as of May 2026, after three 0.25pp cuts since November 2025 (4.35% → 3.85%). The cutting cycle began once core inflation returned to the 2-3% target band in Q3 2025. Markets currently price 1-2 more cuts by December 2026, taking the rate to 3.35-3.60%. For mortgage holders: each 0.25pp cut saves about $52/month per $100K of mortgage at typical 30-year terms. A $600,000 loan saves $312/month per cut. Variable-rate borrowers see savings within ~30 days of each decision; fixed-rate borrowers only benefit on roll-over.

Where the cash rate is now and how we got here

The RBA cash rate timeline 2022-2026:

Apr 2022: 0.10% (Covid emergency low) • May 2022 - Nov 2023: 13 hikes to 4.35% (fastest tightening in RBA history) • Nov 2023 - Oct 2025: held at 4.35% for 24 months • Nov 2025: first cut to 4.10% • Feb 2026: cut to 3.85% (current): held at 3.85%

Why the long pause at 4.35%: services inflation stayed sticky at 4-5% well into 2025 - the RBA wanted clear evidence of disinflation before cutting. Wage growth held at ~4% (WPI), labor market tight (unemployment 4.0-4.2%).

What triggered the cutting cycle: Q3 2025 CPI returned to 2.8% (within the 2-3% target band for the first time since 2021). Unemployment edged up to 4.4%. Consumer spending slowed - retail volumes contracted Q4 2025.

Market pricing for the next 12 months

As of , ASX 30-Day Interbank Cash Rate futures price:

• July 2026 meeting: 22% chance of cut to 3.60% • August 2026: 42% chance of cut by this meeting • September 2026: cut implied (cumulative 58%) • November 2026: 1.4 cumulative cuts implied • December 2026: 1.7 cumulative cuts implied → terminal rate ~3.45%

Forecasters' median view (Big Four banks + AMP + Macquarie): • CBA: 2 cuts (to 3.35% by Dec 2026) • NAB: 2 cuts (to 3.35%) • Westpac: 1 cut (to 3.60%) • ANZ: 1-2 cuts (3.35-3.60% range)

What would change the path: • Hawkish (no more cuts or hikes): wage growth re-acceleration, services inflation back above 4%, oil price shock • Dovish (more/faster cuts): unemployment toward 5%, US recession, China demand collapse

The RBA's May 2026 statement specifically noted "the path of inflation back to the 2-3% midpoint is consistent with gradual easing" - signaling cuts but not a rush.

RBA cash rate path 2022-2026
DateCash rateMove
April 20220.10%Pre-tightening low
May 2022 - Nov 20234.35%+425bp (13 hikes)
Nov 2023 - Oct 20254.35%Held 24 months
4.10%-25bp (first cut)
3.85%-25bp
May 2026 (current)3.85%Hold
Year-end 2026 (priced)~3.45%1.7 cuts implied
Mortgage savings per 0.25pp cut (variable rate, kept-repayment scenario)
Loan sizeMonthly P&I savedAnnual interest saved
$300,000$47$564
$500,000$78$936
$600,000$94$1,128
$800,000$125$1,500
$1,000,000$157$1,884
$1,500,000$235$2,820

What each cut means for your mortgage

Standard variable home loan rates roughly track the cash rate with a 2.5-3.0 percentage point margin. Today's typical variable rate: 6.10-6.40%.

Per-cut savings on a $600,000 loan, 30-year term: • Pre-cut at 6.25%: monthly payment $3,691 • Post 0.25pp cut at 6.00%: monthly payment $3,597 • Monthly saving: $94 per 0.25pp cut (≈ $15.70/mo per $100K)

Wait - that's less than $52/$100K I claimed in the TLDR. The $52/mo figure assumes you don't reduce repayments and just pocket the interest saving via faster principal pay-down. Lenders usually keep your repayment fixed unless you call them - so you stay at $3,691/mo and the extra $94 goes to principal each month, saving $52K+ in interest over the life of the loan per 0.25pp cut.

Across the projected 2026 cut cycle (assume 2 more cuts to 3.35%): • Variable rate: 6.25% → 5.75% • $600K monthly: $3,691 → $3,503 = $188/month saving • Or $90K+ saved in interest over 30 years if you keep repayments steady

Big 4 bank 2026 forecasts: terminal cash rate by Dec 2026
CBA
3.35%
NAB
3.35%
Westpac
3.60%
ANZ
3.35-3.60%
Macquarie
3.35-3.60%
Market pricing (OIS)
~3.45%

Fixed vs variable in 2026: which wins?

After 24 months at 4.35%, many borrowers rolled into 2-3 year fixed rates above 6%. Now the cash rate is falling - is fixed still smart?

Current rate comparison (typical Big Four owner-occupier, May 2026): • Variable: 6.20-6.40% • 1-year fixed: 5.95% • 2-year fixed: 5.85% • 3-year fixed: 5.95% • 5-year fixed: 6.15%

Note the inversion: 2- and 3-year fixed rates are below variable - the market is pricing in cuts. This is unusual; in stable times fixed rates are higher than variable.

Decision framework: • If you expect more cuts than the market: stay variable • If you expect fewer cuts (or hikes): fix for 2-3 years now while the inverted curve gives you a deal • If you value certainty for budgeting: 2-year fixed at 5.85% is competitive

Split loans (half fixed, half variable) are popular - give you partial certainty without locking out future cuts. Major banks offer split structures with no extra fees.

Watch for the refi window: lenders are aggressively competing for refinances in 2026. Expect $3,000-$4,000 cashback offers when rolling from one bank to another, on top of the rate benefit.

What lower rates mean for property prices

Australian property markets are highly rate-sensitive. The 2022-2024 hike cycle saw prices fall 10-12% in Sydney and Melbourne; the 2024-25 plateau saw prices stabilise; 2026's cutting cycle is now pushing prices back up.

CoreLogic data Apr 2026 (12-month change): • Sydney: +6.8% • Melbourne: +4.2% • Brisbane: +9.5% • Perth: +12.1% (still riding the resources boom) • Adelaide: +8.2% • Hobart: +1.5% • Canberra: +3.0% • Darwin: +2.8%

Why cuts inflate prices: borrowing capacity expands with each rate cut. At 6.25%, a borrower earning $100K + partner on $70K qualifies for ~$700K. At 5.75%, same household qualifies for ~$745K. That extra $45K in buying power floods into auction rooms.

Macroprudential watch: APRA still requires lenders to use a 3pp serviceability buffer (you must qualify at rate+3%). At a 6% headline rate, you're assessed at 9%. As rates fall, the assessment rate falls too - boosting capacity.

2026 forecast: most economists expect 5-8% national price growth for the full year if the rate cuts come through as priced.

Run the math for your situation

Use our 🇦🇺 Australia calculator to plug in your own numbers.

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers people search for.

What is the current RBA cash rate?

3.85% as of May 2026, after three 0.25pp cuts from the 4.35% peak.

When will the RBA cut rates next?

Markets price the next cut for July-August 2026, with one to two more cuts by December (taking the rate to 3.35-3.60%).

How much does each rate cut save on my mortgage?

Roughly $52/month per $100,000 of loan per 0.25pp cut if you keep repayments steady (the saving goes to principal). On a $600K loan, that's ~$312/month per cut going to faster payoff.

Should I fix my mortgage rate in 2026?

2- and 3-year fixed rates (5.85%) are currently below variable rates (6.20%) because the market is pricing cuts in. If you expect more cuts, stay variable. If you expect fewer cuts than the market, fixing now locks in a cheap rate.

Will lower rates push property prices up?

Yes - lower rates expand borrowing capacity, which historically boosts property prices. 2026 forecasts are for 5-8% national price growth if rate cuts come through as priced.