19 Jan 20233 min read

Make-or-Buy Decision in Australia: 2026 Guide for Smarter Business Choices

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Cockatoo Editorial Team · In-house editorial team

Reviewed by

Louis Blythe · Fact checker and reviewer at Cockatoo

Should you manufacture in-house or outsource? The 'make-or-buy' decision is a classic dilemma for Australian businesses—from manufacturers to tech startups. In 2026, as supply chains evolve, technology advances, and government incentives shift, this choice is more nuanced than ever. Get it right, and you unlock cost savings, efficiency, and flexibility. Get it wrong, and you risk missed opportunities, bloated costs, or even reputational damage.

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What Is the Make-or-Buy Decision?

The make-or-buy decision is a strategic process where companies decide whether to produce goods or services internally ("make") or purchase them from external suppliers ("buy"). This decision extends across sectors: manufacturers weighing component production, tech firms considering in-house software development, and retailers deciding between logistics providers.

Key drivers for this decision in 2026 include:

  • Cost optimisation amid rising wages and input prices

  • Access to specialist skills or technology unavailable in-house

  • Supply chain resilience and risk management post-COVID and amid ongoing geopolitical tensions

  • Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) compliance and carbon reporting pressures

Key Factors Shaping the Make-or-Buy Landscape in 2026

1. Economic and Policy Shifts

Recent updates to the Instant Asset Write-Off (now extended for eligible assets purchased before 30 June 2026) are nudging businesses towards capital investment for 'making' in-house. However, the new Modern Manufacturing Strategy continues to offer grants and incentives for those investing in local production capabilities—particularly in critical supply chain areas like clean energy, medical manufacturing, and advanced tech.

On the flip side, the 2026 Fair Work Act amendments have increased compliance and wage costs for certain industries, making outsourcing (especially offshore) more attractive for non-core business functions.

2. Cost Analysis: Beyond the Obvious

Purely comparing direct costs is no longer enough. In 2026, smart businesses are running total cost of ownership (TCO) models that factor in:

  • Upfront capital expenditure vs. ongoing supplier fees

  • Hidden costs: quality issues, delays, integration headaches

  • Flexibility and scalability—can you quickly ramp up or down?

  • Regulatory and ESG compliance costs (especially for imports)

Example: An Australian EV startup recently chose to outsource battery casing production to a local supplier. While the per-unit cost was higher than Chinese imports, the overall TCO was lower due to reduced shipping delays, easier compliance with the new National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (NGER) rules, and faster product iterations.

3. Strategic Fit and Competitive Advantage

Not every function should stay in-house. Businesses are increasingly focusing their internal resources on areas that drive unique value or competitive advantage, while outsourcing commodity tasks. In 2026, this might mean:

  • Tech firms keeping proprietary software core, but outsourcing cybersecurity to experts

  • Retailers managing branding and customer experience, but using third-party logistics providers for delivery

  • Manufacturers investing in automation for key components, but buying off-the-shelf parts for non-critical assemblies

Crucially, the decision must align with your long-term business strategy. If speed-to-market or IP protection is vital, making in-house could be worth the upfront investment. If agility and cost control matter most, a well-negotiated supply agreement might be smarter.

Real-World Examples: Make-or-Buy in Action

  • Woolworths recently ramped up in-house logistics after pandemic supply shocks, investing in automated warehouses. The move was driven by a desire for control and resilience, not just cost.

    • Australian fintechs are increasingly outsourcing cloud infrastructure but keeping core payment engines proprietary due to competitive and regulatory demands.

    • Solar panel installers frequently 'buy' panels from overseas, but increasingly 'make' their own monitoring software to differentiate on service and data analytics.

How to Approach the Make-or-Buy Decision in 2026

  • Define your core value drivers. What truly sets you apart?

    • Conduct a robust TCO and risk analysis using current input costs, regulatory factors, and market volatility assumptions.

    • Map the policy and incentive landscape. Check for grants, tax offsets, or compliance changes that tip the scales.

    • Stress-test your supply chain. What happens if a key supplier fails or trade rules shift?

    • Plan for flexibility. Negotiate contracts that allow for scale-up or insourcing if circumstances change.

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Conclusion

The make-or-buy decision in 2026 is about much more than price tags. It's a strategic lever that can define your company's agility, resilience, and profitability in a rapidly changing Australian business landscape. With the right mix of financial analysis, strategic clarity, and awareness of evolving policy, you can turn this decision from a headache into a competitive weapon.

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Published by

Cockatoo Editorial Team

In-house editorial team

Publishes and updates Cockatoo’s public explainers on finance, insurance, property, home services, and provider hiring for Australians.

Borrowing and lending in AustraliaInsurance and risk coverProperty decisions and homeowner planning
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Reviewed by

Louis Blythe

Fact checker and reviewer at Cockatoo

Reviews Cockatoo’s public explainers for accuracy, topical alignment, and consistency before they are surfaced as public educational content.

Editorial review and fact checkingAustralian finance and borrowing topicsInsurance and cover explainers
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