Redland Bayside NewsRedland Bayside News
  • News & Editorial
  • Digital Editions
  • Pickup Locations
  • Advertise With Us
Reading: Low vacancy rate squeezes rentals
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Redland Bayside NewsRedland Bayside News
Search
  • News & Editorial
  • Digital Editions
  • Pickup Locations
  • Advertise With Us
Follow US
Redland Bayside News > Real Estate > Low vacancy rate squeezes rentals
Real Estate

Low vacancy rate squeezes rentals

Redland Bayside News
Redland Bayside News
Published: November 23, 2023
Share
2 Min Read
Renters are facing difficult times, with vacancy rates in Brisbane currently sitting at less than one per cent. Photo: AAP Image/James Ross
Renters are facing difficult times, with vacancy rates in Brisbane currently sitting at less than one per cent. Photo: AAP Image/James Ross
SHARE

Finding an affordable rental has become a lot harder as the national rental vacancy rate plummets to a record low.

The vacancy rate sits at just 1.02 per cent after falling slightly in October, with most major capital cities following the trend according to PropTrack’s Market Insight Report.

Renters faced more competition for housing with vacancies down in both capital city and regional areas, PropTrack economist Anne Flaherty said.

“Tenants faced even tougher conditions in October, with the proportion of rental properties sitting vacant falling to the lowest level on record,” she said.

- Advertisement -

The rental vacancy rate is at a record low in Queensland with available options in Brisbane sitting at less than one per cent.

It’s even tougher to find rentals in the west as Perth’s vacancy rate has remained below one per cent for 15 consecutive months.

Hobart recorded the sharpest decline with 0.18 per cent fewer rental options, but remained the second-easiest city to find a rental.

Adelaide was one of two capital cities to buck the trend with a slight increase but retained the nation’s lowest vacancy rate.

Darwin’s vacancy rate jumped 0.68 per cent to almost 2.5 per cent.

The regional areas in each state were in lock-step with their capital cities when it came to rental vacancy movement, with South Australia and the Northern Territory the only areas to see an uptick in rental availability.

Ms Flaherty said vacancy rates had been trending downwards for more than three years. She said the trend “looks likely to continue” off the back of strong population growth and a slowdown in the supply of new housing.

-AAP

Share This Article
Facebook Email Print

Latest Real Estate News

BREATHING SPACE: For now, mortgage holders can take some comfort from the numbers,
Inflation drop lowers fears around rate hike
Real Estate
KEY REFORMS: The changes are designed to increase the flow of capital into residential development.
Open for business: Red tape cut to boost state’s housing supply
Real Estate
GETTING BUSY: New listings are coming on, buyers are active and competition will be strong.
Market pause ends as competition ramps up
Real Estate
Alexandra Hills named among Brisbane’s best suburbs for first-home buyers in 2026
Community Featured News Real Estate

You Might Also Like

A housing is still driving the market.
Real Estate

Sunshine State property prices show no signs of slowing down

March 25, 2024
Annual house price growth remains impressive across the state
Real Estate

Queensland real estate steadies, but predictions are it will ‘spring’

December 5, 2024
Economists argue that some housing election promises will drive competition for limited stock, pushing prices up further.
Real Estate

Election promises could miss the mark

April 24, 2025
Estate agents are here to help
Real Estate

Estate agents are here to help

October 26, 2023
Copyright © 2026 Local News Group - Website by LNG Digital
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?