Momentum in the Australian economy accelerated in 2025, though it came at a cost by sparking renewed inflationary pressures. Real GDP growth was 0.8% in the December quarter - aligning with market and RBA forecasts - and 2.6% through the year, up sharply from its pace a year earlier (1.2%).
Global growth was an important factor that supported the Australian economy, remaining resilient to trade and geopolitical headwinds. The US weighed on global growth in the December quarter amid a partial government shutdown, but growth in China - Australia's major trading partner - was solid, supporting commodity exports.
In Australia, growth picked up over the course of the year, driven largely by private demand (3.2%Y/Y). This included gains across household consumption (2.4%Y/Y) as the RBA's easing cycle gained traction, and private investment (5.3%Y/Y). Capex spending associated with data centres surged to spark the business investment cycle (4.4%Y/Y), and dwelling investment (5.5%Y/Y) was supported by RBA rate cuts and a buoyant housing market. Meanwhile, public demand (2.1%Y/Y) also showed renewed strength as investment picked up over the back half of the year. These factors all combined to see domestic demand (0.5%q/q) rise by 2.9% year-on-year, its fastest pace since Q3 2023.
The strength in domestic demand surprised the RBA, leading the Board to conclude that monetary policy was less restrictive than previously thought as inflation reaccelerated above the 2-3% target band. This prompted a rate hike at the February meeting, with the RBA highlighting concerns around capacity pressures. On that front, the National Accounts contained some good news as productivity growth held up (1%) to see unit labour costs ease (3.3%Y/Y) to a near 5-year low. Nonetheless, the RBA appears on track to hike the cash rate in May, following the 25bps increase in February.
National Accounts — Q4 | Expenditure: GDP (E) 0.8%q/q, 2.7%Y/Y
Household consumption (0.3%q/q, 2.4%Y/Y) — Household consumption growth was surprisingly modest at 0.3% in the December quarter, its softest outcome in more than a year. However, consumption still lifted by 2.4% through the year and was the key driver of economic growth as RBA rate cuts and rising real incomes gained traction.
The surprise came in discretionary consumption, which saw only a modest lift of 0.4% - especially after declining by 0.2% in Q3 - despite an extended Black Friday sales period and a stacked major events calendar. Essentials meanwhile rose by just 0.2%, though that takes into account a sizeable decline in utilities (-9.5%) associated with government rebates on electricity bills in New South Wales, Western Australia and the Australian Capital Territory. The ABS noted that household consumption excluding utilities lifted by 0.4% in the December quarter.

Household finances were looking fairly health as 2025 wound down. Gross disposable income lifted 1.8% in the quarter - wage incomes were up 1.4% in a robust labour market - and 6.9% over the year. This was sufficiently robust to outpace the pick-up in inflation, which the HCFE deflator clocked at 0.9%q/q and 3.2%Y/Y. This allowed real disposable incomes to continue to rise (0.9%q/q, 3.7%Y/Y), supporting the uplift in consumption in 2025 as well as boosting the saving rate to 6.9%, its highest since Q3 2022. The RBA's easing cycle was another key support for consumption. A total of 3 rate cuts saw the cash rate fall by 75bps in 2025, with interest payments falling on dwellings (-6.8%Y/Y) and consumer debt (-3.1%Y/Y).
Dwelling investment (0.6%q/q, 5.5%Y/Y) — Residential construction activity (0.6%q/q) rose by 5.5% through the year. This was supported by a buoyant housing market, with the RBA cutting rates and housing prices rising in the order of 8% nationally in 2025. In the December quarter, new home building advanced by 1.1% (6%Y/Y), reaching its highest level since early 2019. Alteration work softened by 0.3% (4.6%Y/Y).
Business investment (0.5%q/q, 4.4%Y/Y) — Coming off its strongest rise in 4½ years in the previous quarter (3.8%), business investment advanced a further 0.5% in the December quarter. Year-on-year growth firmed to 4.4%. Non-dwelling construction (1.2%) recorded a similar pace of growth to Q3 and was the key driver, supported by data centres. The fit-out of data centres played a key role in Q3 as equipment investment surged (7.7%), but this quarter it eased back by 1.1%. Intellectual property products (1.9%) also drove business investment.
Public demand (0.8%q/q, 2.1%Y/Y) — Rose by 0.8% in the quarter to be up by 2.1% across the back half of the year, a clear resurgence after a flat first half. Public investment turned the tide as the 2.2% increase in the previous quarter was followed up with a 0.4% lift this quarter. This was after the investment pipeline pulled back by more than 5% in the first half as major projects wound down. Government expenditure lifted by 0.9%q/q on increased spending at the state (electricity rebates) and federal (Medicare, NDIS and defence) levels.
Inventories (0.4ppt in Q4, 0.1ppt yr) — Total inventory levels increased by around $0.7bn in the December quarter. In the previous quarter, inventories declined by $1.8bn. The swing in inventory levels from Q3 (-$1.8bn) to Q4 ($0.7bn) was around $2.5bn, delivering a 0.4ppt contribution to quarterly growth, its largest boost since Q1 2024.
Net exports (-0.1ppt in Q4, -0.2ppt yr) — Deducted 0.1ppt from quarterly GDP, with net exports weighing on growth in three of the four quarters in 2025. Robust domestic demand underpinned a 1.8% rise in imports, which outpaced growth in exports (1.4%).
Import volumes picked up from a 2.7% pace in the first half of the year to rise by 3.9% in the back half. The lift was driven by a second half surge in capital goods (8.1%) that was associated with the fit-out of data centres. Notably, services imports slowed to the point of backsliding slightly in the second half (-0.2%) as offshore travel demand weakened. Exports rose by 1.4% for the second quarter in succession. While services exports slowed over the back half of the year (3.1%), that was offset by a lift in goods exports (2.7%). That was driven by a rebound in coal exports (7.3%) and strength in iron ore (4.6%).
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National Accounts — Q4 | Incomes: GDP (I) 0.8%q/q, 2.4%Y/Y
Growth in the GDP income estimate matched the headline figures at 0.8% quarter-on-quarter and 2.4% year-on-year. This occurred within the backdrop of nominal GDP growth of 1.8% in the quarter and 6% over the year. The terms of trade modestly supported nominal growth rising by 0.4%. This came as export prices (1.8%) lifted on the back of factors including higher iron ore prices, while a strong Australian dollar put downward pressure on import prices (1.4%).
Conditions in the domestic labour market remained robust in 2025, retightening in the final quarter. The unemployment rate fell to average 4.2%, down from 4.3% in the September quarter as employment growth reaccelerated. This supported growth in wage incomes, with the compensation of employees measure lifting by 1.4% quarter-on-quarter and 6.4% year-on-year. Wage incomes rose by 1.4% across the both the private and public sectors in the quarter.
The solid demand backdrop underpinned rising company profits, up 2.2% in the December quarter and 4.4% over the year. Private non-financial company profits lifted by 1.9% - their strongest quarterly rise since Q1 2023 - with the mining sector a key contributor on higher prices for iron ore, gold, and lithium. Meanwhile, improved margins and strong demand supported profits for airlines within the transport sector. Financial corporations saw profits rise at a strong pace (2.3%q/q and 8.9%Y/Y), with the RBA's easing cycle not proving to be a headwind for lending margins. Gross mixed income (small business profits) also accelerated, up 3.9% in the quarter to record their fastest annual growth (8.5%) since the post-Covid demand surge in Q1 2021.

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National Accounts — Q4 | Production: GDP (P) 0.8%q/q, 2.6%Y/Y
The December quarter's estimate for GDP on the production approach was 0.8%, elevating annual growth to 2.6% - its fastest pace in almost 3 years. Growth was evenly distributed across the goods and services sectors.
In the goods sector, the main contributor to output growth was the mining industry. Production in the mining industry rose by 2.6% in the December quarter, with output lifting across iron ore, coal and LNG. Consumer demand underpinned increased output in the transport (1%), retail (0.3%) and wholesale industries (0.4%).
Output in the services sector was led by business services, which rose by 1.3% for the quarter. This included strong gains in financial (1.3%) and professional services (1.9%), while information media and telecommunications (1.2%) was supported by data centre activity. Household services saw output lift by 0.3% in Q4. The key support was accommodation and food services (0.8%) on the back of strong demand for dining out and a boost for hotels from international and domestic travel.