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Sydney Auction Clearance Rates Hold Firm – What the Numbers Are Really Saying

Inner-ring neighbourhoods defy national jitters as city sellers capitalise on low supply and steady demand.

By Sydney Property Desk · Published 4 July 2026, 12:14 pm

3 min read

Sydney Auction Clearance Rates Hold Firm – What the Numbers Are Really Saying
Photo: Photo by Macourt Media on Pexels

Sydney’s auction clearance rates are clinging to their winter highs, clocking in at just over 67% last weekend, according to fresh CoreLogic figures. This persistent strength comes even as other capitals, most notably Melbourne, show sellers losing faith in headline-grabbing Saturday sales.

Why Sydney's Market Muscle Matters Now

The winter months are typically cooler for property transactions. Yet, in 2026, the city’s housing scene is refusing to hibernate. Agents in popular city-fringe precincts tell The Daily Sydney that short supply and relentless migration-driven demand are cushioning Sydney’s auction market from the wavering confidence seen in Victoria. That means sellers from Erskineville to Balgowlah have held off panic-listing, with vendors preferring to wait rather than discount in a climate where serious buyers still compete.

High-profile Saturday auctions this past weekend drew crowds outside a double-fronted terrace on Trafalgar Street, Annandale, while at Freshwater, a four-bedroom family home on Ocean View Road exceeded its $2.7 million reserve as three registered bidders pushed the price to $2.93 million. LJ Hooker Inner City’s offices reported clearance rates over 75% for the last two weeks, driven by homes near transport and established amenities.

Price Pressures and Local Competition

Data from Domain backs up the heat: of 738 homes scheduled for auction across Greater Sydney last Saturday, 492 changed hands as auction or pre-auction deals, with a median house price of $1.55 million for homes sold under the hammer. In Marrickville, a semi-detached three-bedder fetched $1.82 million, 9% above its January 2026 sale price, marking a clear return to quarterly price growth in the inner west.

Conversely, some northern and eastern suburbs are experiencing patchier conditions. In Neutral Bay, a two-bedroom unit in Ben Boyd Road was passed in after failing to attract bidders—a subtle reminder that overpricing will not fly even in a hot market. Still, tight supply remains in the city’s inner ring, with REINSW recording less than four weeks’ stock on market for the Balmain and Mosman pockets as of mid-June.

With international and interstate arrivals still pouring in, especially for local tech and healthcare jobs concentrated in North Ryde and the Macquarie Park corridor, auction volumes are expected to hold steady through July. Buyers’ agents, such as those at Cohen Handler’s Surry Hills office, say time on market remains stubbornly brief at under 30 days for quality listings.

Reading the Signals – What Next?

For buyers, the current rate of sales and low listing volumes point to sustained competition across Sydney’s most sought-after neighbourhoods. Prospective homeowners will need finance in order and a clear understanding of local sale prices, as agents flag limited scope for major winter bargains. Vendors, meanwhile, should be wary of stretching price expectations, especially for apartments or less renovated stock in quieter pockets.

With clearance rates holding above 65% and no flood of new listings in sight before spring, industry watchers expect the Sydney market’s resilience to hold for at least another quarter. If the Reserve Bank’s forecasts of stable rates through December materialise, experts anticipate another round of buyer activity as the warmer months approach.

Topic:#Property

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This article was produced by the The Daily Sydney editorial desk and covers property in Sydney. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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