Increasing demand and an undersupply of accommodation impacts affordability for Australian renters

key takeaways

Key takeaways

Rental affordability is at the highest level since June 2014, with 30.8 per cent of income required to service a new lease nationally, for a median income household.

At the lower household income level, 51.6 per cent of income would be required.

Rental affordability is most strained across Hobart, Regional QLD and Regional NSW.

Rental vacancy rates as of April 2023 were 1.1 per cent nationally, below a decade average of 3 per cent.

Total rent listings are 38.1 per cent below the previous decade average.

Sydney is the most unaffordable market for home ownership, with 51.6 per cent of income required to service a new mortgage on average, and around 12 years to accumulate a 20 per cent deposit.

An undersupply of rental accommodation and an increase in renters is deteriorating affordability, a new report from ANZ and CoreLogic has found.

The ANZ CoreLogic Housing Affordability Report: reflections on the pandemic and the rental market unpacks the state of affordability in the Australian rental market and looks at the many ways in which the pandemic has influenced the supply and demand of rental accommodation.

The report explained that challenges related to COVID-19 have added to the rental crisis.

Add to that fluctuations of interest rates, inflation, and migration and this has created a mismatch of supply and demand.

The report found rental affordability – the portion of income required to service a new lease – is at the highest level since June 2014, with 30.8 per cent of income required to service a new lease nationally, for a median income household.

At the lower household income level, 51.6 per cent of income would be required, suggesting particular pressure for households at the 25th percentile income level.

Rental Affordability

rental affordability

ANZ Senior Economist Felicity Emmett said it’s important to factor in rental metrics when looking at housing affordability in Australia.

“Heightened economic uncertainty has seen a decline in sales volumes in the private market and an increase in those seeking rental accommodation. Paired with a decline in social housing, rental demand pressures are being felt in all income brackets,” Ms Emmett said.

Rental vacancy rates as of April 2023 were 1.1 per cent nationally, below a decade average of 3 per cent.

In the same period, total rent listings are 38.1 per cent below the previous decade average.

Rental Affordability 2

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