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19 Jan 20233 min read

Tick Size in Australia: What Investors Need to Know for 2026

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Cockatoo Editorial Team · In-house editorial team

Reviewed by

Louis Blythe · Fact checker and reviewer at Cockatoo

When you glance at a stock’s price chart, you’ll notice that prices don’t move in continuous flows—they jump in small increments. That increment is called the tick size. While it may seem like a technical footnote, tick size plays a crucial role in shaping market liquidity, trading costs, and even your ability to get the best price when buying or selling shares on the ASX.

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What is Tick Size and Why Does It Matter?

Tick size is the minimum price movement allowed between different bids or offers on the market. On the ASX, this is usually one cent for most equities, but can be smaller or larger depending on the price of the security or the asset class. For example, shares trading under $2 typically have a tick size of 0.1 cent, while those above $2 have a 1 cent tick size.

  • Liquidity: Smaller tick sizes can encourage tighter bid-ask spreads, making it easier for buyers and sellers to meet at a fair price.

  • Trading costs: The tick size can impact the cost you pay to enter or exit a position, especially for frequent or high-volume traders.

  • Market structure: Exchanges regularly review tick size settings to balance competition, liquidity, and trading efficiency.

How Tick Size Impacts Your Trading and Investment Decisions

Tick size isn’t just a market microstructure issue—it directly affects your trading outcomes. Here’s how:

  • Order execution: A smaller tick size can help you get filled closer to the current market price, reducing slippage for limit orders.

  • Bid-ask spread: Narrower spreads lower your implicit trading costs, especially important for active traders and ETF investors.

  • Liquidity for small-caps: For illiquid stocks, too-small tick sizes can reduce incentives for market makers, making it harder to buy or sell at the quoted price.

Example: Imagine you’re trading shares of a tech stock priced at $1.95. With a tick size of 0.1 cent, there could be bids at $1.95, $1.951, $1.952, etc. This allows for more granular price improvement but can also lead to order book congestion. By contrast, a $10 stock with a 1 cent tick size will see more streamlined, but potentially wider, price gaps.

Tick Size and the Rise of Algorithmic Trading

Algorithmic and high-frequency traders (HFTs) are highly sensitive to tick size. Too small a tick, and algorithms may flood the market with orders, increasing noise and complexity. Too large, and spreads widen, potentially discouraging trading and harming liquidity. The ASX’s 2026 review aims to strike a balance—keeping the market competitive for retail investors while discouraging manipulative practices like quote stuffing.

For everyday investors, the main takeaway is that tick size reforms are designed to keep your trading experience efficient, transparent, and fair—no matter how the underlying technology evolves.

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Conclusion: The Smallest Details Can Make a Big Difference

Tick size may seem trivial, but it quietly shapes the costs and quality of your share trading in Australia. With ongoing reforms in 2026, Australian investors can expect a more dynamic, globally competitive, and liquid market. Whether you’re placing your first trade or managing a large portfolio, understanding tick size is a smart step toward more informed investing.

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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.

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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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