July 1, 2024

Vagmare.com

The Intersection of Information and Insight

Where have all the affordable rentals gone?

4 min read

Crisis conditions have gripped Australia’s rental markets in recent years, with affordable rentals now few and far between.

According to PropTrack, nationally advertised rental prices are up 43% for houses and 46% for units compared to pre-pandemic levels.

In some markets, like Queensland and WA, median advertised weekly rents have surged by close to 80% since March 2020.

These increases are evident across both capital cities and regional areas.

Change In Median Advertised Weekly Rents March 2020 April 2024 Units

Decreasing supply of affordable rentals

PropTrack’s Senior Economist, Eleanor Creagh said that the significant rise in rents since the pandemic has seen the share of properties listed for rent under $400/week hit a record low of just 10.4% nationally.

In the capital cities, only 5.9% of rentals are now less than $400 a week.

She further said:

“A persistent shortage of available rentals, combined with strong demand bolstered by record net migration, has pushed rental vacancy rates to historic lows.

Since late 2021, rental market conditions have tightened considerably in city markets hit hardest by the pandemic.

Smaller households, cities springing back to life, and a surge in net migration and student arrivals have all contributed to this trend.”

Data from PropTrack show that although vacancy rates have eased slightly in the past couple of months, they remain close to record lows and less than half the level considered healthy.

Low vacancy rates drive rents higher, creating challenging conditions for renters.

Ms Creagh commented:

“Rental listings under $400/week have plummeted in every market for both houses and units.

At the start of the pandemic, one in five house rentals in Sydney cost less than $400 a week – now it’s one in 50.

In Melbourne, it’s one in 25.”

Share Of Total Rental Listings Below 400 Per Week April 2024

Impact on lower-income households

Ms Creagh said that these forces place immense pressure on renters, especially lower-income households, as cheaper rentals become ever scarcer.

She further commented:

“For households earning in the bottom 20% of the income distribution, only about 1 in 100 rentals advertised nationwide in April 2024 were affordable (based on spending 25% of their pre-tax income on rent).

For those in the bottom 30%, about 1 in 30 rentals were affordable, meaning they would need to spend more than 40% of their income on rent to find an affordable place.”

This situation highlights the critical need for rental support for low-income renters and an increase in the supply of housing.

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