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Compare Home Loan Rates — Australia, June 2026

Sniff out the sharpest home loan rates across 85+ Australian lenders — refreshed daily. Sorted by comparison rate so the genuinely cheapest loans sit at the top.

Rates updated |1,299 products|85+ Australian lenders
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Editor's Pick · Ratesniffers Editorial Team

Top Home Loan Rates in June 2026

If you're shopping for a home loan in June 2026, our index shows clear standouts across the variable, fixed and interest-only categories. Here are the three sharpest rates we're tracking right now — refreshed daily, with no commercial filtering.

ME Bank - ME Go logoOnline
ME Bank CompleteME Home Loan
Owner-occupier5y FixedP&IOffsetRedrawExtra repayments$3,000 cashback
Cashback eligibility
  • Min loan $700,000
  • Max LVR 80%
  • Aggregate split refi loans to meet $700k minimum (same customer, same submission)
  • Mixed refi + purchase apps eligible — one $3k per application
  • Excludes BOQ Group refis + recipients of BOQ refi cashback in last 12 months
  • Offer ends 28 Aug 2026 · lender T&Cs
Interest
5.89%p.a.
Comparison*
5.94%p.a.
Monthly repayment
$2,962
LVR 70–80%
MyState Bank logo
Fixed Rate Loan
Owner-occupier2y FixedP&IExtra repayments
Interest
6.09%p.a.
Comparison*
6.12%p.a.
Monthly repayment
$3,027
LVR 71–80%
Up logoOnline
Up Home Loan
Owner-occupier2y FixedP&IOffsetRedrawExtra repayments
Interest
6.35%p.a.
Comparison*
Monthly repayment
$3,111
LVR
Summerland Bank logo
Fixed Rate Loan
Owner-occupier2y FixedP&IRedrawExtra repayments
Interest
6.14%p.a.
Comparison*
6.36%p.a.
Monthly repayment
$3,043
LVR
Auswide Bank Ltd logo
HOME LOAN PLUS
Owner-occupier1y FixedP&IOffsetRedrawExtra repayments
Interest
6.49%p.a.
26d ago
Comparison*
6.57%p.a.
Monthly repayment
$3,157
LVR
*Important Information and Comparison Rate Warning

This comparison rate applies only to the example or examples given. Different amounts and terms will result in different comparison rates. Costs such as redraw fees or early repayment fees, and cost savings such as fee waivers, are not included in the comparison rate but may influence the cost of the loan. The comparison rate displayed is based on a loan of $150,000 over a term of 25 years.

The information provided on this site is general in nature and does not take into account your objectives, financial situation or needs. Before acting on any information, consider whether it is appropriate for you and read the relevant Credit Guide and lender disclosures.

Reviewed by the Ratesniffers Editorial TeamUpdated Rates refreshed daily

About home loan rates in Australia (June 2026)

The lowest home loan rate on Ratesniffers right now is a headline rate from 5.49%, refreshed on 7 June 2026 across 3,711 products from 85+ Australian lenders. The table above is sorted by comparison rate, so the genuinely cheapest loans sit at the top — not the ones paying for placement. We don't take paid ranking; every qualifying lender appears regardless of whether it advertises with us.

How to compare home loan rates the right way

The headline rate is only half the picture. Two loans advertised at the same rate can cost very differently once fees are counted, which is why the table above ranks by comparison rate rather than the headline number. When you compare, weigh four things together:

  • Comparison rate, not just the headline. It bundles standard upfront and ongoing fees into a single figure, so a low headline rate hiding a $400 annual fee can't flatter itself.
  • Features you'll actually use. A 100% offset account, free redraw, or unlimited extra repayments can save more than a few basis points on the rate — but only if you'd use them.
  • Your LVR. The sharpest rates need a deposit of 20% or more. Filter by your real loan-to-value ratio so you only see loans you'd qualify for.
  • Loan type. Owner-occupier rates beat investor rates, and principal-and-interest beats interest-only. Make sure you're comparing like with like.

What affects the rate you're offered

The advertised rate is a starting point — the rate a lender actually offers you depends on your profile. The biggest levers are your deposit size (a lower LVR is cheaper), whether the loan is owner-occupier or investment, principal-and-interest versus interest-only repayments, the property type and location, and your credit history. This is also where negotiation matters: lenders routinely shave their advertised rate for strong applicants who ask, which is the single fastest way to a lower number.

How home loan rates are set in Australia

Australian home loan rates are anchored to the Reserve Bank's cash rate, but they aren't a direct copy of it. When the RBA moves the cash rate, lenders' funding costs shift, and most pass some — not always all — of the change through to variable rates, usually within a month. On top of that shared floor, each lender adds a margin reflecting its funding mix, risk appetite and how hard it's competing for new borrowers. That's why two lenders can advertise very different rates in the same week: the cash rate is the floor everyone shares, and the margin on top is where they compete. Fixed rates are priced differently again — off what money markets expect the RBA to do over the fixed term, so they often move ahead of the cash rate rather than after it.

The fees that change your real rate

A sharp headline rate can still hide an expensive loan. The fees worth checking are the upfront application or establishment fee (often $0–$600), any ongoing annual or monthly fee (a $395 package fee adds roughly 0.08% to the cost of a $500,000 loan), and the discharge fee you'll pay when you eventually leave. The comparison ratefolds the standard ones into a single figure — which is why the table above ranks on it — but it's normalised on a $150,000 loan over 25 years, so on a larger or shorter loan a fixed annual fee bites differently. If your deposit is under 20%, factor in Lenders Mortgage Insurancetoo: it's a one-off cost that can run into the thousands and easily outweighs a few basis points on the rate.

How to get a lower home loan rate

You rarely need to switch lenders to pay less. Start by calling your current lender's retention team, quoting a cheaper comparable rate from the table above, and asking them to match it — they price new customers more sharply than existing ones, so loyalty quietly costs you. If they won't move, refinancing to a lender that will is usually straightforward, and many pay cashback to switch. The fastest route is to let a broker run that negotiation across the whole panel at once — it's free, because the lender pays the broker, and it's the service Ratesniffers connects you to.

Home loan rate FAQs

What are the current home loan rates in Australia?

Owner-occupier variable rates across Australian lenders currently span roughly the high-5% to high-6% range, with investor and interest-only rates sitting higher. The table above shows today's live rates, refreshed daily and sorted by comparison rate.

Which bank has the best home loan rate?

There is no single bank with the best rate for everyone — the sharpest advertised rates usually come from online-direct lenders and challenger brands rather than the Big Four, but the rate you actually qualify for depends on your deposit (LVR), whether you're owner-occupier or investor, and the loan features you need. The lender at the top of the table above has the lowest comparison rate today; sort and filter to match your own situation, then let a broker negotiate the final number with the lender.

What is a good home loan interest rate?

A good rate is one at or near the top of the comparison table above for your specific situation. If you're paying noticeably more than the cheapest comparable loans — particularly with a 20%+ deposit and clean credit — it's worth asking your lender for a discount or refinancing.

What's the difference between the interest rate and the comparison rate?

The interest rate (or headline rate) is the cost of the loan before fees. The comparison rate folds in most standard upfront and ongoing fees, normalised on a $150,000 loan over 25 years, so two loans with the same headline rate but different fees show different comparison rates. It's a mandatory disclosure under the National Consumer Credit Protection Act 2009, and it's the fairer number to rank loans by — which is exactly how the table above is sorted.

How do I get the best home loan rate?

Five levers move your rate the most: a lower LVR (a bigger deposit), choosing owner-occupier over investor where it applies, principal-and-interest over interest-only, a clean credit file, and simply asking. Lenders routinely offer existing customers a discount when they call to leave — and a mortgage broker can run that negotiation across the whole panel at once, which is the service Ratesniffers connects you to for free.

Can I ask my lender for a lower rate?

Yes — and you should. Lenders price new customers more sharply than existing ones, so loyalty often costs you. Call your lender's retention team, quote a cheaper comparable rate from the table above, and ask them to match it. If they won't move, refinancing to a lender that will is usually straightforward, and many pay cashback to switch.

What is the average home loan interest rate?

Average advertised owner-occupier variable rates sit well above the cheapest rates, because the average is dragged up by lenders who don't compete on price. That's the point of comparing: the gap between the average rate and the lowest rate in the table above is real money. Rather than aim for the average, aim for the top of the table for your situation.

When will home loan rates go down?

Variable home loan rates track the Reserve Bank's cash rate, so the direction of rates depends on the RBA's decisions, which it reviews roughly every six weeks. We don't make forecasts we can't stand behind, but we do publish a wrap of every RBA decision and what it means for variable-rate borrowers — see our news page. Fixed rates move ahead of the cash rate, based on what the market expects the RBA to do next.

How often do home loan rates change?

Individual lenders change rates continually — sometimes several times a week, and often within days of an RBA decision or a competitor's move. That's why a comparison table is only useful if it's fresh. Ratesniffers refreshes its rate index daily and stamps every page with the last-updated date so you're never comparing stale numbers.

Are fixed or variable rates better right now?

Variable rates move with the RBA cash rate, so you benefit when rates fall and pay more when they rise; they also tend to come with offset accounts and free extra repayments. Fixed rates lock your repayment for a set term, which buys certainty but usually limits extra repayments and charges break costs if you exit early. Many borrowers split the loan to get some of each — you can filter for fixed, variable or split above.

Do I need a 20% deposit to get a good rate?

A deposit of 20% or more (an LVR of 80% or less) gets you the sharpest rates and avoids Lenders Mortgage Insurance, but you can borrow with as little as 5% down. Lower deposits usually mean a slightly higher rate plus LMI — though first home buyers using the federal Home Guarantee Scheme can avoid LMI even with a small deposit. Use the LVR filter above to see only the loans you qualify for.

Should I use a mortgage broker to find a better rate?

A broker compares lenders for you, handles the paperwork, and negotiates the rate on your behalf — usually at no cost to you, because the lender pays the broker. The advantage is leverage: a broker knows which lenders are discounting this week and can put your file in front of the one most likely to say yes. Ratesniffers connects you to a broker who works the whole panel; the comparison itself is always free.

How current are the rates on this page?

Every rate here was last refreshed on 7 June 2026 and is re-checked daily against each lender's own published product pages before it goes live. We stamp the date on the page so you can see exactly how fresh the data is.

Is Ratesniffers free, and how does it make money?

Comparing rates and using the calculators is completely free, with no sign-up or email gate. We don't take paid placement to influence the ranking — loans are sorted by comparison rate, full stop. When you choose to speak to a broker about applying, the lender pays the broker a commission, the same way it would for any mortgage. That's how the service stays free to you.

Keep comparing:Best rates by categoryCheapest rates todayRefinance ratesFirst home buyer loansInvestor loansRepayment calculatorHow we rank rates