Sydney Auction Clearance Holds At 52 Per Cent In Latest Domain Update
Sydney's latest auction figures are still pointing to a cooler winter market, with Domain's updated table listing a 52 per cent clearance rate for the week from 31 May to 6 June.

Sydney terrace housing in Chippendale.
Sydney's latest auction figures are still pointing to a cooler winter market, with Domain's updated table listing a 52 per cent clearance rate for the week from Sunday, 31 May to Saturday, 6 June.
The confirmed facts are specific enough to matter for Sydney readers. Domain's Sydney auction results page, last updated on 9 June 2026, listed 713 auctions scheduled, 457 reported, 236 sold, 156 withdrawn and 65 passed in. The table showed total reported sales of $227,778,664 and a median of $1,425,000. Separately, the NSW Government said construction had begun on 113 social and affordable homes at Padstow, including 64 social homes and 49 affordable homes near Padstow station. The story is therefore not just a headline; it affects how residents, commuters, venues, families, workers or visitors should read the next few days of city life.
The two items belong together because Sydney property is not one market story. Auction clearance rates show the temperature of private sales campaigns, while social and affordable housing announcements point to supply that is not governed by Saturday bidding alone. A 52 per cent clearance rate does not mean buyers have suddenly solved affordability, and a Padstow project does not solve housing stress by itself. Both are pieces of a larger winter picture.
For the property desk, the local angle is practical. Sydney is a city where government decisions, police operations, event programs and weather conditions quickly become household logistics: what route to take, which venue to avoid, whether to book, how early to leave, or what risk to monitor. This update gives readers enough verified detail to act without turning the article into advice beyond the source material.
For buyers, the figures suggest more caution and more room to test price expectations than in a hotter auction room. For vendors, they are a warning against stale reserve thinking. For renters and key workers, the Padstow project is a reminder that market cooling and public supply are separate issues. Renters do not automatically benefit because some auctions pass in, especially when incomes, deposits, borrowing limits and location still define the choices available.
What should readers watch next? Next week's auction table, revised reported volumes, withdrawal trends and any Padstow construction milestones will show whether this is a steady winter pattern or just a long-weekend distortion. That follow-up should come from the named official source or another primary record, not from social media speculation. The Sydney Scoop is keeping source URLs inside the upload pack for verification, but those links should not be displayed publicly on the live article page.
The article deliberately avoids unsupported claims. It does not invent quotes, does not identify people beyond the source material, and does not add numbers that are not in the public record. Where a figure is used, it comes from the linked source. Where an allegation is involved, the wording remains conditional and procedural. That is especially important for policing, health, court-adjacent and public-safety stories.
The safe conclusion is narrow but useful: Sydney's auction market remains soft at a 52 per cent clearance rate, while public housing supply continues to advance on a separate track. That is enough for a local daily article. If the story develops after publication, it should be handled as a new update with a fresh timestamp rather than by quietly changing the verified record in this article.
