RBA Pause Gives Borrowers Breathing Space, Not Relief
Why households may need to plan for higher rates lasting longer
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The Reserve Bank of Australia has kept the cash rate on hold at 4.35% at its June meeting, giving households a pause after three increases earlier in 2026.
For mortgage holders, the decision is welcome, but it is not the same as relief.
The RBA remains concerned that inflation is still too high, while global pressures, including oil supply disruption, are complicating the outlook.
The central bank’s message is that it wants more time to assess how previous rate rises are flowing through the economy. That matters because monetary policy often works with a lag. Households may already be cutting back, businesses may be delaying investment, and job market conditions can soften before inflation returns to target. In other words, the pause is less a sign that the pressure is over and more a sign that the RBA is watching carefully.
For everyday Australians, the practical takeaway is to avoid building a budget around quick rate cuts. Commonwealth Bank economists expect the RBA to remain on hold for the rest of 2026, with possible cuts not arriving until 2027. HSBC has also characterised the current stance as a wait-and-see phase, with the RBA balancing weaker growth against the risk that inflation stays stubborn.
Borrowers should use the pause to review rather than relax. If your home loan rate has drifted higher, it may be worth asking your lender for a pricing review, checking the comparison rate, and modelling your repayments under different scenarios. Even if the RBA does not move, lenders still compete for quality borrowers, particularly those with strong equity positions and reliable repayment histories.
Savers face a different challenge. Higher rates can support term deposit and savings account returns, but inflation can still erode purchasing power. The key is to compare the real return after fees, tax and rising living costs, rather than focusing only on the headline rate. Investors should also be cautious about chasing yield without understanding risk, especially in volatile markets.
There are three sensible money moves while rates remain uncertain:
Stress-test your household budget against both another rate rise and no cuts for at least 12 months.
Review fixed expenses such as insurance, utilities and loan repayments before discretionary spending is squeezed further.
Consider whether a broker or adviser could help you compare options, particularly if your loan, super or investment arrangements are complex.
The RBA’s June pause buys time, but it does not remove the need for action. With inflation still elevated and growth slowing, households that plan conservatively are likely to be better placed than those waiting for rate cuts to do the heavy lifting.
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