Stagflation is back on Australia’s radar – what it means for your mortgage
You’ve probably heard the word “stagflation” appearing in the news with increasing frequency.
It sounds technical and a little alarming, and given what’s happening in the Australian economy right now, it deserves a clear, honest explanation.
This isn’t scaremongering. It’s about understanding what stagflation in Australia means in 2026, and what, if anything, you should be doing about your mortgage and finances.
What is stagflation?
Stagflation occurs when three unwelcome economic forces hit simultaneously:
- High or rising inflation — the cost of living keeps climbing
- Slow or stagnant growth — the economy stops expanding meaningfully
- Rising unemployment — businesses cut costs and jobs as conditions tighten
What makes it so difficult to fix is that the usual policy tools directly conflict with each other:
| Rate hikes | Rate cuts or fiscal stimulus | |
|---|---|---|
| Help | Dampen demand and bring inflation down | Boost growth and jobs |
| Harm | Slow growth further and push unemployment higher | Risk entrenching inflation, especially when driven by supply shocks like oil |
In a normal recession, the RBA can cut rates with confidence as inflation falls. In stagflation, inflation stays stubbornly elevated even as growth falters — leaving policymakers caught between two competing problems with no clean answer.
Is Australia in stagflation right now?
Not definitively — but the warning signs are real.
| Indicator | Status in 2026 | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Inflation (CPI) | 3.7% annual | Above the RBA’s 2–3% target |
| Unemployment | ~4.3% | Low, but economists warn it could rise |
| Economic growth | Slowing | Momentum has stalled |
Former RBA board member Professor Bob Gregory has said Australia may already be seeing the initial signs of stagflation. Former Treasury Secretary Dr Martin Parkinson warns the risk is substantial. Not everyone agrees we’re there yet — but the conditions are aligning closely enough to warrant attention.
The current threat is largely supply-side, driven by soaring fuel prices from the Middle East conflict. HSBC’s chief economist has warned Australia is “less well placed” than many peers to absorb this kind of shock, given inflation was already above target before the energy crisis hit.
What does stagflation mean for your mortgage and finances?

Your repayments
With the RBA having raised the cash rate three times in 2026 to 4.35%, repayments are already elevated. If inflation stays sticky, further rises remain possible. Variable rate borrowers feel each move immediately — and those rolling off fixed rates face a significant adjustment.
If you haven’t reviewed your home loan recently, a mortgage review could be one of the most valuable conversations you have this year.
Your household budget
Rising prices for food, fuel and utilities are outpacing wage growth for many Australians, reducing real disposable income. For mortgage holders, this double pressure — higher repayments and less purchasing power — is where stagflation becomes genuinely painful day-to-day.
Your property
Stagflationary conditions can soften buyer demand and dampen price growth as borrowing capacity reduces. That said, Australia’s chronic housing undersupply continues to provide a structural floor — particularly in capital cities where rental vacancy rates remain near historic lows.
Your investment property
Investors face higher holding costs through elevated rates, but strong net migration and tight rental supply continue to support yields in most markets. Loan structure matters more now than it has in years — fixed vs variable, and how your offset facility is working, are worth revisiting.
What should you do? Five practical steps
- Review your mortgage rate: The gap between what some existing borrowers are paying and what’s available on the market can be significant. In many cases a better rate requires no refinancing — just a broker negotiating on your behalf. Find out how a mortgage review works.
- Stress-test your budget: Run your numbers at today’s rate and at 0.25–0.50% higher. If it gets uncomfortable, better to know now than later.
- Review your loan structure: Fixed, variable or split — what suited you 18 months ago may not be optimal today. An environment where rates stay higher for longer changes the calculus.
- Be conservative with new borrowing: Borrow based on what you can comfortably service at current rates, not on an assumption that rates will fall soon.
- Make your offset account work harder: At 4.35%, every dollar in offset is effectively earning your mortgage rate — well above most savings accounts. If you hold surplus cash, where it sits matters.
The bottom line
Australia is not in full stagflation today — but the conditions are aligning in a way that warrants genuine attention from anyone with a mortgage or investment property. The right response isn’t anxiety. It’s preparation.
For further reading, the Reserve Bank of Australia publishes regular updates on inflation and monetary policy, and the Australian Bureau of Statistics publishes official CPI and employment data.
Talk to the Indigo Finance team
Every borrower’s situation is different. Whether you’re a homeowner, investor or first home buyer, we can help you review your loan, stress-test your repayments and make sure your structure is right for the environment we’re in.


