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Tasmania Property Auction Clearance Rates Slip in June

Hobart's premium suburbs see auction clearance rates fall to 59-62% as Tasmania's property market cools. Sandy Bay and Battery Point show strongest decline.

By Tasmania Property Desk · Published 1 July 2026 at 4:08 am

3 min read

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Tasmania Property Auction Clearance Rates Slip in June
Photo: Photo by Warren Griffiths on Pexels

Tasmania's residential auction clearance rate dipped to 67 per cent over the past month, marking a notable shift from the robust 74–78 per cent range that characterised the first half of 2026. The slowdown, while still respectable by historical standards, reflects growing caution among buyers as winter inventory builds and interest rate uncertainty persists across the state.

The decline was most pronounced in Hobart's traditionally strong precincts. Sandy Bay and Battery Point—long the backbone of the capital's auction market—recorded clearance rates of 62 and 59 per cent respectively in June, down from the mid-70s just eight weeks prior. Agents report that properties priced above $750,000 in these leafy suburbs are lingering longer on the market, with buyers increasingly selective about location premiums and renovations required.

"We're seeing fatigue in the top quartile," observed one Hobart auctioneer this week, noting that three-bedroom period homes on Cascade Road and around the Sandy Bay golf course are attracting fewer competitive bids than earlier in the year. "Buyers are doing their homework harder now."

North Hobart and Lenah Valley, positioned as more accessible alternatives, performed comparatively better, with clearance rates holding around 71 per cent. The Launceston market bucked the broader trend, with auction success hovering near 75 per cent, suggesting the northern city's status as a lifestyle migration destination continues to underpin steady buyer demand despite headwinds elsewhere.

Residential property analyst data indicates that the median price for clearances across Greater Hobart remains solid at approximately $565,000—consistent with the state average—but the composition has shifted. Fewer premium sales have pushed the clearance profile toward the middle market, where buyer pools remain more resilient.

Autumn and early winter typically introduce seasonal softness to Tasmanian auctions, but agents cite additional pressure from recent tax changes and the cumulative effect of rate rises on investor confidence. Properties listed at Cormack's Real Estate in Battery Point and across major Hobart rooms report vendor expectations have moderated, with some accepting lower reserves to secure sales before the school holidays drive further disruption.

The outlook for July and August remains guarded. While the fundamentals supporting Tasmania's long-term property appeal—lifestyle migration, relative affordability, and limited stock—remain intact, the near-term auction calendar suggests clearance rates may stabilise in the low-to-mid 60s until spring market momentum returns.

This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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

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