IBISWorld Platform
Answer any industry question in minutes with our entire database at your fingertips.
IBISWorld forecasts consumer sentiment to average 90.2 index points in 2025-26, representing a downturn of 0.2 index points over the previous year. Consumer sentiment has remained below 100 due to a myriad of factors, including elevated cost-of-living pressures, a persistent housing affordability crisis and a softening job market. The RBA implemented a series of cash rate increases from May 2022 to November 2023 to counter inflationary pressures. After a period of stability, the cash rate underwent multiple cuts in 2025, with three cuts in February, May and August, which helped improve consumer sentiment throughout the year. Early 2026, however, saw the outbreak of war in the Middle East, bringing chaos to supply chains and upending efforts to rein in inflation.Consumer sentiment in Australia has been dragged down by a range of events, ranging from a pandemic to war, over the past few years. In 2020-21, consumer sentiment rebounded strongly as discretionary household incomes rose from the severely depressed levels of the previous year, resulting from the pandemic. Rapid growth in demand and improved spending, combined with tumbling unemployment through to 2021-22, kept consumer sentiment positive into 2021-22. Rampant inflation in 2022-23 forced the RBA to lift interest rates throughout the year, contributing to a cost-of-living crisis. Heightened costs related to mortgages, healthcare and energy all negatively impacted consumer sentiment. This sent the consumer sentiment index spiralling downward in 2022-23. Low unemployment and rate cuts in 2024-25 provided relief for consumers' hip pockets, with sentiment rallying again over the year, but still below 100.2025-26 saw mixed results for consumer sentiment. With calendar year 2025 providing three rate cuts despite persistent inflation, sentiment was on the up during the first half of the 2025-26 financial year. The second half of the financial year, however, saw the start of a war between Iran, Israel and the US, disrupting supply chains and most noticeably creating a fuel shortage. Due to the war, consumer sentiment tanked in the last few months of the financial year, rolling back most of the improvements made earlier. Overall, IBISWorld forecasts the consumer sentiment index to decline at an average annual rate of 2.8 points over the five years through 2025-26.
Curious about what drives these trends? IBISWorld's analyst coverage on the consumer sentiment index includes detailled analysis on the current performance, outlook and industries affected.
1976-2033
This report analyses the consumer sentiment index. The consumer sentiment index is an average of five sub-indexes that measure survey responses about five matters: household financial situation over the last year; household financial situation over the coming year; anticipated economic conditions over the coming year; anticipated economic conditions over the next five years; and buying conditions for major household items. A reading of 100 in each sub-index means that the number of positive responses is equal to the number of negative responses. The data for this report is sourced from the monthly Westpac-Melbourne Institute Index of Consumer Sentiment via the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and is measured in index points. This report uses the average of monthly index values over each financial year.
IBISWorld Industry Reports are available in multiple formats to fit seamlessly into your workflow.
Answer any industry question in minutes with our entire database at your fingertips.
Feed trusted, human-driven industry intelligence straight into your platform.
Streamline your workflow with IBISWorld’s intelligence built into your toolkit.
Explore industries with similar markets, supply chains, and economic drivers to gain broader context and insights.
When the stakes are high, you need intelligence that cuts through the noise—wherever you work.
The consumer sentiment index in Australia in 2026 was 90.2 percentage.
The consumer sentiment index in Australia declined by -2.84% in 2026.
IBISWorld’s data and analysis on consumer sentiment index in Australia includes forecasted growth rates over the next five years.