Canberra’s property market is punishing indecision
Despite buyer-friendly conditions, Canberra’s, and the broader ACT, property market is exposing the cost of hesitation, with prepared buyers benefiting from moving first and complacency increasingly proving costly.
Property markets move in cycles, yet investor behaviour does not always adjust as quickly as conditions change.
Whether the market favours buyers or sellers, complacency can lead to missed opportunities, unnecessary risk, and costly outcomes.
This is particularly relevant in the current ACT environment, where buyer behaviour itself is increasingly shaping market dynamics.
Understanding the differences between a buyers’ market and a sellers’ market matters. What matters more is how investors respond to those conditions.
Buyers’ markets: opportunity, but also behavioural risk
A buyers’ market is generally understood to occur when supply outweighs demand and purchasers have greater choice. In practical terms, this can present as longer selling timeframes, more willingness from vendors to negotiate, and a perception among buyers that there is little urgency to commit.
In the ACT at present, agents have been reporting growing frustration with buyers submitting offers and then withdrawing, sometimes more than once, as purchasers hesitate or continue to wait for something better to emerge.
For investors, buyer-friendly conditions can be highly advantageous, however, they also create a subtle risk: the belief that time is unlimited.
When buyers assume there will always be another opportunity, they may overlook genuinely strong assets when they appear. Over time, this pattern of hesitation can quietly undermine portfolio growth.
The danger in a buyers’ market is not necessarily paying too much. It is waiting too long.
Sellers’ markets: urgency without preparation
Sellers’ markets tend to bring out very different behaviour.
Competition increases, properties move more quickly, and buyers recognise the need to be organised. Finance is arranged earlier, contracts are reviewed promptly, and decisions are made with greater discipline
What is interesting is how quickly buyer behaviour changes when conditions shift.
The same purchasers who delay and hesitate in softer markets often become decisive when competition returns. This highlights an important truth for investors: strong habits should not depend on the market. They should exist regardless of it.
A growing ACT dynamic: properties selling before auction
Despite broader buyer-friendly conditions, many ACT properties are reportedly selling prior to auction, particularly where pricing is aligned with market expectations and buyer interest is concentrated.
This can catch complacent buyers off guard.
Those who assume they hold all the leverage may delay engagement, only to find that well-prepared competitors have moved more decisively.
It also reinforces an important principle for investors: even in softer markets, quality property continues to attract competition.
Gazumping, withdrawals, and false confidence
One of the clearest examples of misplaced confidence occurs when buyers assume they are “safe” when an offer is accepted but before contracts are exchanged.
Legal frameworks differ across jurisdictions, but the underlying principle remains consistent: until an agreement is legally binding, nothing is certain.
In buyer-leaning markets, risky behaviour can include making offers without genuine intent, withdrawing repeatedly while keeping options open, delaying legal review, or assuming that low competition removes the need for professionalism.
Over time, this approach can damage credibility, frustrate vendors, and ultimately reduce a buyer’s ability to compete when it truly matters.
No investor would like to find themselves tagged as the Boy Who Cried Wolf; agents, like markets, have long memories.
The bottom line for ACT investors
The ACT currently appears to offer opportunity for considered buyers, however, it is not a market that rewards indecision, casual engagement, or lack of follow-through.
As in other jurisdictions, the first home buyer cohort has created an unprecedented level of interest in the mid-tier market and investors looking to purchase capital appreciating dwellings have had competition from younger buyers and their parents looking to empty the nest.
The investors who perform best over time are not those who try to “time” the market perfectly. They are those who take the process seriously.
They prepare their finance early. They seek advice before they need it. They make offers deliberately rather than impulsively. And when the right property appears, they act with confidence rather than hesitation.
Markets will always move through cycles. Behaviour, however, is a choice. Complacency remains one of the most expensive mistakes property investors make — regardless of whether conditions favour buyers or sellers.












