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The Block 2025: Daylesford Season Recap, Auction Results and What Happened Next

Season 21 Full Recap

“The reality is, despite The Block houses being incredible, they are in a third-grade location. On the highway and opposite a pet shop. It wouldn’t have mattered if The Block houses were gilded with gold, that location was always going to hold them back.”

Kim McQueen, selling agent for Han and Can’s House 2, speaking to realestate.com.au after the 2025 auction

The Block 2025: Season Overview

The Block returned for its 21st season in 2025, with five teams building brand-new homes on Cedar Lane in the historic spa town of Daylesford, about 80 minutes north-west of Melbourne. The season aired from Sunday 27 July 2025 on Channel Nine and 9Now.

It was a season of several firsts. For the first time ever, all five teams built identical homes from the same floor plan, designed by longtime Block architect Julian Brenchley. Every team had the same layout and the same total build budget of $250,000. Also new for 2025: all-nighters were banned. The building site was locked each night, meaning time management became even more critical than usual.

The season also celebrated a milestone: the 1,000th episode of The Block aired during the 2025 run.

Scott Cam and Shelley Craft returned as hosts. Judges Darren Palmer, Shaynna Blaze and Marty Fox assessed each weekly room reveal. Dan Reilly was foreman. And this was the first season Block fans watched a contestant give birth mid-competition: Emma Cox delivered her son Bailey Colter Cox on 25 September 2025, just weeks before the auction.

The Five Teams

Cedar Lane, Daylesford: The 2025 Teams

House 1 (5 Cedar Lane): Emma and Ben Cox
Melbourne, VIC. Married couple: dance teacher and engineer. Emma was pregnant for the majority of filming and gave birth to son Bailey just weeks before the auction. One of the most-supported teams of the season.
House 2 (4 Cedar Lane): Han and Can (Hannah Thetford and Candice Wood)
Perth, WA. Couple: geologist and social media and marketing analyst. Known for their bold design choices, including dramatic Torii gate elements. Their home drew no registered bidders on auction day.
House 3: Britt and Taz Etto
Newman, WA. Married couple, both 30, both police officers. Widely regarded as fan favourites throughout the season. Went on to win the competition.
House 4 (2 Cedar Lane): Sonny and Alicia Aplin
Gold Coast, QLD. Married couple: plumber and dental practice manager. Had a $50,000 advantage heading into auction after winning Front Yard Week, giving them a reduced reserve of $2.94 million.
House 5 (1 Cedar Lane): Robby Lippett and Mat Johnson
Adelaide, SA. Best mates: barber and hairdresser. The strongest performers during the competition, winning five room reveals including their standout living and dining room. Their secret weapon was a hidden underground wine cellar. Widely considered pre-auction favourites to win.

The Reserve Price Controversy

Nothing defined the 2025 season more than the reserve prices, and almost nothing has generated more discussion about The Block in years.

Channel Nine, using valuations conducted by CBRE, set all five reserves at $2.99 million. The exception was Sonny and Alicia’s House 4, which received a $50,000 reduction from their Front Yard Week win, bringing their reserve to $2.94 million.

The problem: Daylesford’s median house price at the time of the auction was $820,000, according to PropTrack data from July 2025, and that figure was already down 7.1 per cent from the previous year. The reserves were set at more than three and a half times the local median. Selling agent Kim McQueen told realestate.com.au that, to the best of her knowledge, only one home in the entire history of Daylesford had ever sold for $3 million or above before The Block arrived.

Multiple agents involved in the season say they raised concerns before the auction. McQueen said CBRE contacted her during the valuation process and she spoke with them in depth on two separate occasions. She was subsequently told the valuers intended to value the properties at around $3 million each.

Agents for Han and Can’s House 2 said they gave their feedback to Channel Nine when the reserves were being set and felt the figures did not reflect the current market. They believed a reserve closer to $2.8 million would have produced a different result on the day.

The contestants found out their reserves on auction morning. The mood, by all accounts, shifted immediately. What had been a celebration became a strategy session.

By the numbers: Daylesford median house price (July 2025): $820,000. The Block 2025 reserve price: $2,990,000. That is 3.65 times the local median.

Adding to the difficulty: Adrian Portelli, the billionaire buyer who single-handedly rescued the 2024 Phillip Island auction by purchasing all five houses for a combined $15.05 million, did not attend the 2025 auction. He later told Domain his decision was based on “a balanced consideration of cost and location, coupled with a shift in overall business direction.” His buyer’s agent was present on the day but placed no bids.

Auction Day: All Five Results

Auction day, 26 October 2025, was held in heavy rain in Daylesford. All five teams had unanimously agreed on the auction order in the lead-up, a rare show of unity that quickly gave way to anxiety once the reserves were revealed.

The auction order was: Britt and Taz (House 3), Robby and Mat (House 5), Emma and Ben (House 1), Sonny and Alicia (House 4), and Han and Can (House 2).

Only three of the five homes sold under the hammer. Total prize money distributed across all five teams: $749,999. That is the smallest figure since the 2011 season in Richmond, when just one couple took home $115,000.

2025 Auction Results: House by House

House 3: Britt and Taz SOLD

Reserve: $2,990,000. Sold for: $3,410,000. Profit over reserve: $420,000. Bonus for highest margin: $100,000. Total prize: $520,000. Sold to a buyer new to The Block. Britt and Taz were declared the winners. “That’s paid off our mortgage. It’s life-changing,” Britt said on the day.

House 5 (1 Cedar Lane): Robby and Mat SOLD

Reserve: $2,990,000. Sold for: $3,099,999.10. Profit: $109,999.10. Buyer: Danny Wallis, purchasing his 12th Block property. Pre-auction favourites who had won five room reveals and built a secret underground wine cellar. Third place overall.

House 1 (5 Cedar Lane): Emma and Ben PASSED IN

Reserve: $2,990,000. Bidding reached $2,970,000 (below reserve) before Emma and Ben called a halt. The auction was paused while they consulted with their agent, Aaron Hill of Ray White Sunbury. A vendor bid of $3,100,000 was placed but attracted no buyer. The house was passed in. Prize money: $0.

House 4 (2 Cedar Lane): Sonny and Alicia SOLD

Reserve: $2,940,000 (reduced by $50,000 for winning Front Yard Week). Sold for: $3,060,000. Profit: $120,000. Second place. Buyers agent Frank placed the winning bid after one of the longest pauses in auction history.

House 2 (4 Cedar Lane): Han and Can PASSED IN

Reserve: $2,990,000. Han and Can came to auction with no registered bidders. A vendor bid of $3,100,000 attracted no offers. The house was passed in. Prize money: $0. Agent Natalie Fagan of Belle Property Daylesford said the reserve did not reflect market conditions and that the couple had been left in an “incredibly difficult position.”

Final standings: 1st Britt and Taz ($520,000), 2nd Sonny and Alicia ($120,000), 3rd Robby and Mat ($109,999), 4th and 5th Emma and Ben, and Han and Can ($0 each).

The Homes That Still Have Not Sold

The story of The Block 2025 did not end with the auction. For two of the five teams, it was only the beginning of a drawn-out wait.

Emma and Ben’s House 1 and Han and Can’s House 2 both passed in on the day and were subsequently listed for private sale. By the end of October 2025, one week after the auction, neither had sold. By late January 2026, three months later, neither had sold. Both homes remained on the market with no prospective buyers, despite agents reporting a broader surge of buyer interest in the Daylesford area to start the new year.

In April 2026, TV Tonight reported that Han and Can’s House 2 at 4 Cedar Lane had its asking price cut to $2.9 million, placing it $90,000 below the original reserve it could not reach at auction. Emma and Ben’s House 1 at 5 Cedar Lane remained listed at a $3 million to $3.3 million price guide, though agent Aaron Hill indicated he was seeking to have that figure reduced even more significantly.

As of the time of writing, both homes are believed to remain unsold. Agents remain publicly optimistic, citing ongoing enquiries from interstate buyers seeking a lifestyle property, but acknowledge that the prestige end of the Daylesford market is highly competitive and the supply of sub-$800,000 properties is drawing far more buyer activity than the $3 million tier.

Where the other homes ended up:

Britt and Taz’s winning home: Converted to an Airbnb following the season.

Emma and Ben: The couple, who welcomed baby Bailey during the filming period, subsequently listed their own Mornington home for sale with a price guide of $1.75 million to $1.925 million.

Robby and Mat’s House 5 (1 Cedar Lane): Purchased by Danny Wallis at auction for $3,099,999.10 and owned by him as part of his growing Block property portfolio.

Sonny and Alicia’s House 4 (2 Cedar Lane): Sold at auction for $3,060,000.

What the 2025 Season Means for The Block 2026

The reserve price controversy cast a long shadow over the show’s reputation and has directly shaped how Channel Nine is approaching 2026. The decision to move the 2026 season to Mount Eliza on Victoria’s Mornington Peninsula, one of the state’s most prestige coastal markets, is widely seen as a deliberate correction: a location where $3 million-plus property is not a novelty but a regular transaction.

Speaking to contestants on arrival at the Mount Eliza filming site, Scott Cam noted it was the first time in 22 seasons the show had a water view location. A production source described the 2026 season as “one of the most premium yet,” with reserve prices expected to exceed the 2025 figures.

Whether that means another Adrian Portelli-style auction or something more like the disaster of Daylesford will depend on the market and the timing. The Block 2026 is expected to premiere on Channel Nine in late July or August 2026.

For all current information on the 2026 season, see our The Block 2026: Mount Eliza, Mornington Peninsula guide.


The Block 2025: Frequently Asked Questions

Who won The Block 2025?

Britt and Taz Etto, both police officers from Newman in Western Australia, won The Block 2025. Their home sold at auction for $3,410,000 against a reserve of $2,990,000, delivering a profit of $420,000. They also received the $100,000 bonus for the highest margin above reserve, bringing their total prize to $520,000.

Where was The Block 2025 filmed?

The Block 2025 was filmed on Cedar Lane in Daylesford, Victoria, approximately 80 minutes north-west of Melbourne. Five brand-new homes were built from scratch on the same floor plan, designed by architect Julian Brenchley.

What were the reserves on The Block 2025?

All five reserves were set at $2,990,000. Sonny and Alicia received a $50,000 reduction after winning Front Yard Week, giving them a reserve of $2,940,000. The reserves attracted significant controversy given Daylesford’s median house price was $820,000 at the time of the auction, making the reserves more than three and a half times the local median. Multiple selling agents said publicly the reserves were too high for the market.

How many homes sold at The Block 2025 auction?

Three of the five homes sold under the hammer. Britt and Taz’s home, Robby and Mat’s home (to Danny Wallis), and Sonny and Alicia’s home all sold on the day. Emma and Ben’s home and Han and Can’s home were both passed in.

Have the unsold Block 2025 homes sold yet?

As of June 2026, both Emma and Ben’s House 1 and Han and Can’s House 2 remain unsold. Han and Can’s asking price was reduced to $2.9 million in April 2026, placing it below the original reserve price. Emma and Ben’s home remains listed at $3 million to $3.3 million, though the selling agent has indicated the guide needs to come down further.

What season was The Block 2025?

The Block 2025 was Season 21. It also marked the show’s 1,000th episode milestone.

Where was The Block 2025 before Daylesford?

The Block 2024 (Season 20) was set at Phillip Island, Victoria. That season was the most lucrative in Block history, with Adrian Portelli purchasing all five houses for a combined total of $15.05 million. Portelli did not return as a buyer in 2025.


Page update log: 10 June 2026: Page created. Includes full auction results and April 2026 update on unsold homes. Last verified: 10 June 2026.

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The Block 2025

The Block 2025: Where Are They Now? Every Team and Judge Catches Up

Season 21 Catch-Up: June 2026

It has been eight months since the Daylesford auction, and life has moved on quickly for all five teams and the regular cast. Britt and Taz are renovating a Tudor-style farm south of Perth. Darren Palmer and Shaynna Blaze are in Sicily. Marty Fox has opened in Dubai. And two of the Cedar Lane homes are still on the market.

Here is the full update on where every team and judge is now.


Britt and Taz: Hazelwood Estate, North Yunderup WA

Winners, $520,000 prize

The fan favourites have wasted no time putting their Block winnings to work. In February 2026, Britt and Taz quietly settled on a $1.41 million Tudor-style hobby farm at North Yunderup, near Mandurah in Western Australia, before revealing the purchase to fans in May. They named it Hazelwood Estate.

The property has been on their wish list for a decade. Before buying, the couple described searching for ten years for a “little farm near the ocean.” What they found is considerably more than little: a six-bedroom, three-bathroom home built in 1981, sitting on 2.24 hectares with fenced paddocks, horse stables, a sand riding track, workshops, sheds and a swimming pool.

Inside, the home is exactly as it left 1981. Red patterned carpet. Exposed brick. Heavy timber beams. Ornate plasterwork. A timber kitchen. Retro bathrooms. Britt and Taz have described it as “in desperate need of love” and say they are planning a major transformation, with the interior being the first priority.

“I don’t think it’s fully sunk in yet that this is ours.”

Britt and Taz, announcing the Hazelwood Estate purchase on Instagram, May 2026

On the work front, Britt and Taz have transitioned out of frontline policing and into new roles in police media for the Western Australia Police Force. The move gives them more flexibility to spend time with their two children, Carter and Myla, while still staying within the force.

Their Block winning house in Daylesford has been converted to an Airbnb.

Britt and Taz made history in 2025 as the first Western Australian team to win The Block in the show’s 22-year history.


Emma and Ben: New Parents, New House

House 1 passed in at auction, prize money: $0

Emma gave birth to the couple’s first child, Bailey Colter Cox, on 25 September 2025, four weeks before the Block auction. It remains one of the most remarkable stories of the season: a woman working a full construction build while pregnant, delivering a healthy baby, and then watching her home pass in on auction day six weeks later.

Since the show, Emma and Ben have moved forward with a fresh property chapter. The couple sold their own home and purchased a $920,000 fixer-upper in Mount Martha, also on Victoria’s Mornington Peninsula. It is, in a sense, a return to what they know: a property in need of renovation, in a market they clearly believe in.

The Daylesford house update: Emma and Ben’s Block house at 5 Cedar Lane, Daylesford, passed in with a vendor bid of $3.1 million and has been listed for private sale since October 2025. As of June 2026, it remains unsold. The asking price guide of $3 million to $3.3 million is understood to be under review, with agent Aaron Hill of Ray White Sunbury indicating the figure needs to come down further to find a buyer in the current Daylesford market.

Despite the auction heartbreak, Ben was characteristically composed on the day. Through tears, he told cameras he had a beautiful wife and a beautiful baby. That was already a win.


Han and Can: Fan Favourites Who Still Have Not Sold

House 2 passed in at auction, prize money: $0

Han and Can came to auction with no registered bidders and watched their home pass in on a vendor bid of $3.1 million. It was a hard watch. “We’ve got our health and we’ve got each other,” Can said on the day, as the pair looked ahead to selling privately.

Eight months later, they are still waiting. Han and Can’s House 2 at 4 Cedar Lane, Daylesford, was still on the market as of June 2026. In April 2026 the asking price was cut to $2.9 million, placing it $90,000 below the original reserve it could not reach on auction day.

Their agents Natalie Fagan and Ashlee McKee of Belle Property Daylesford say they are receiving ongoing enquiries, with interest from interstate buyers in Queensland and New South Wales looking for a lifestyle property. The $3 million-plus tier in Daylesford remains competitive and slow-moving.

Away from the property market, the response to Han and Can from fans and the wider industry has been warm. The Perth couple became one of the most-talked-about teams of the 2025 season, with the design community in particular noting the boldness and consistency of their aesthetic. Whether any of that translates into further TV or industry work remains to be seen.


Robby and Mat: Back Home, Moving On

House 5 sold to Danny Wallis for $3,099,999.10, profit: $109,999

Robby and Mat were widely regarded as the strongest team during the 2025 competition, winning five room reveals across the season and unveiling a surprise underground wine cellar as their final showstopper. Heading into auction day, many tipped them to win.

The result stung. Danny Wallis, making his 12th Block purchase, paid $3,099,999.10 for House 5, leaving the Adelaide best mates with $109,999 to split between them. For a team that had come so close to the top, $54,500 each felt like a hollow reward for twelve weeks of work.

“Well, that was disappointing,” Mat said at the finish line. Scott Cam was also left visibly shocked by the result.

Since the show, Mat has settled back into home life in Adelaide, with reports suggesting a new chapter of family focus. Robby has been keeping his options open, with industry chatter about possible television opportunities ahead. The pair remain close, and their bromance was one of the highlights of the season for audiences.


Sonny and Alicia: $120,000 and Moving Forward

House 4 sold for $3,060,000, profit: $120,000

The Gold Coast couple came into the auction with a slight advantage, having won Front Yard Week and received a $50,000 reduction on their reserve, bringing it to $2.94 million. After one of the longest pre-bid pauses in Block auction history, buyers agent Frank Valentic placed the winning bid of $3,060,000, giving Sonny and Alicia second place and $120,000 in prize money.

It was a better result than many feared after watching Emma and Ben’s auction unfold before them. Alicia admitted on the day she had not expected a good result at all after the mid-auction drama. She and Sonny thanked supporters on social media after the episode aired.

The couple had a tougher time in the weeks following the show. Alicia spoke publicly about the impact of online bullying, saying she had been brought to tears by comments directed at her during and after the season. Sonny was supportive throughout, defending his wife publicly when the criticism became particularly targeted.

Their Daylesford House 4 at 2 Cedar Lane sold on auction day and has since settled.


Darren Palmer and Shaynna Blaze: One Euro, One Villa, One New Show

New Channel Nine show: 1 Euro House

The two longest-serving Block judges have announced a new project together: a Channel Nine series called 1 Euro House, in which they purchase and renovate a derelict property in Sicily, Italy, through the Italian government’s “one euro homes” scheme.

The scheme, which operates across several depopulated Italian regions, allows buyers to purchase abandoned properties for one euro on the condition that they commit to a full renovation. Darren and Shaynna took up the offer, acquiring a dilapidated villa in the Sicilian town of Castronovo.

Channel Nine confirmed the show as part of its 2026 programming lineup at its annual upfront event. Darren was already posting from Sicily by late 2025, sharing footage from the property on Instagram. Shaynna said she had been “so excited to finally announce” the project, adding that keeping it secret had been “almost as big a challenge” as the renovation itself.

“Keeping this one under wraps this year has been almost as big a challenge for me as the renovation itself.”

Shaynna Blaze, announcing 1 Euro House on Instagram, October 2025

The series is described as a blend of travel, design and culture shock, following the pair as they work with local Sicilian tradespeople and artisans to restore the villa. The town of Castronovo sits in the mountainous interior of Sicily, a long way from the coastal prestige markets both judges are used to assessing on The Block.

As of June 2026, both Darren and Shaynna are confirmed to return as judges for The Block 2026 at Mount Eliza. The executive producer of The Block noted after the 2025 auction that they had planned to begin work on 1 Euro House before the end of February 2026, which suggests the Sicily filming has been completed or is well underway, with a return to The Block from mid-year.


Marty Fox: Whitefox Goes Global

New Whitefox offices in Dubai and London

While Darren and Shaynna were heading to Sicily, Block judge and Whitefox Real Estate founder Marty Fox was pointing his agency in a different direction: Dubai.

Whitefox opened its Dubai office in late 2025, with Fox targeting $500 million in first-year sales from the new base. Dubai represents a natural fit for the brand: a city driven by international capital, luxury residential product and design-led marketing, all areas where Whitefox has built its identity in Australia. The agency’s Dubai office is described on its website as bringing the same “bold, polished and matter of fact” campaign approach that defines the Melbourne mothership to “one of the world’s most influential property markets.”

Dubai is not the only expansion on the horizon. Fox has also confirmed a London office is opening, and told the Herald Sun that the business is tracking towards $2.5 billion to $3.5 billion in annual sales. A research trip to the United States is planned for 2026 to scope out a possible American launch. “Once we land in the US, it’s game on,” he said.

The longer-term picture is equally ambitious. Fox has indicated that he and his family plan to relocate to Europe for at least a year starting in June 2027 to support the new business rollouts. That timeline would place him overseas during the filming window for any Block season airing in 2028, raising early questions about his long-term availability as a judge. For now, he is confirmed back on the panel for The Block 2026 at Mount Eliza.

Whitefox by the numbers (2025 to 2026): Offices in Melbourne, New Zealand, Perth, Adelaide, Brisbane, Gold Coast, Sydney, Dubai, London (opening). Business tracking to $2.5 to $3.5 billion in annual sales. Fox founded Whitefox with his wife in 2017.


Dan Reilly: New Baby, New Season

Back as Foreman for The Block 2026

Block foreman Dan Reilly and wife Dani welcomed a new baby, Fletcher, in early 2026. Dan marked the end of Block 2026 filming by walking his newborn son around the completed Mount Eliza site. He is confirmed returning as foreman for the 2026 season.


Scott Cam and Shelley Craft: Business as Usual

Both returning as hosts for The Block 2026

Despite occasional speculation about the future of the hosting lineup, both Scott Cam and Shelley Craft are confirmed back for the 2026 season at Mount Eliza. Scott has been characteristically visible in the lead-up to the new season, greeting the 2026 contestants on site at the start of filming and providing the most-quoted line of the pre-season period: “It’s been 22 seasons of The Block, and we’ve never had a water view before.”


Quick Reference: 2025 Season at a Glance

The Block 2025: All Five Teams, Then and Now
Britt and Taz (WA, winners): $520,000 prize. Block home converted to Airbnb. Transitioned to police media roles. Purchased $1.41 million Hazelwood Estate hobby farm at North Yunderup WA in February 2026.
Sonny and Alicia (QLD, 2nd): $120,000 profit. Block house at 2 Cedar Lane sold on auction day and settled. Spoke publicly about online bullying after the show.
Robby and Mat (SA, 3rd): $109,999 profit, split two ways. House 5 sold to Danny Wallis at auction. Mat in family mode in Adelaide. Robby exploring future opportunities.
Emma and Ben (VIC, passed in): No prize money. Baby Bailey born September 2025. Block house at 5 Cedar Lane still unsold (June 2026). Sold own home and purchased $920,000 Mount Martha fixer-upper.
Han and Can (WA, passed in): No prize money. Block house at 4 Cedar Lane still unsold (June 2026). Price cut to $2.9 million in April 2026. Strong fan following continues to grow post-show.

For all current news on the next season, see our The Block 2026: Mount Eliza, Mornington Peninsula guide.


Page update log: 10 June 2026: Page created. Covers all five contestant teams and the regular cast as of June 2026. Includes Hazelwood Estate purchase (May 2026), Han and Can price cut (April 2026), Whitefox Dubai opening (late 2025), and 1 Euro House announcement (October 2025). Last verified: 10 June 2026.

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