Running on empty
The rental market is almost running on empty. Photo – Canva
  • Changes in regulations around lending added to current rental shortage issue
  • Nationwide, rental vacancy rates are around 2%, a 'balanced market' is 3%
  • In capital cites like Adelaide and Perth, vacancy rates are below 1%

The current nationwide undersupply of rental properties is partly the result of lending restrictions that came into force four years ago, according to the Property Investment Professionals of Australia (PIPA).

A number of smaller capital cities are currently struggling with significant rental supply shortages, with vacancy rates also at record lows, but the pandemic is not totally to blame.

Australia’s fall in rental availability, below 3%

[Select part of the chart to zoom in on various years, and ‘reset zoom’ button to return]

PIPA Chairman Peter Koulizos said the restrictions on investment lending that began in March 2017 saw a drastic reduction in investor activity, which slashed the usual supply of rental stock being added to the market. In fact, property investor activity reached a 20-year low in May last year, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

Peter Koulizos
Peter Koulizos, Chair of PIPA. Image supplied.

“Investor activity dropped about 50% from March 2017 to May 2020 because of the lending restrictions that were applied carte blanche to investors around the nation four years ago,” Mr Koulizos said.

“Back then, the restrictions came into effect because of the strong property price growth in Sydney, but investors everywhere were also blocked from securing finance even in markets with benign market conditions at the time, such as Perth, Adelaide and Brisbane.”

The vacancy rate industry standard for a ‘balanced’ rental market is 3% with any percentage below that figure considered to reflect a market with more demand than supply, according to PIPA.

Mr Koulizos said a number of capital cities and regional locations have vacancy rates of less than 1% at present.

“Vacancy rates in inner-city Sydney and Melbourne have spiked over the past year due to the loss of international students and overseas migrants, but even many suburbs in these cities are also experiencing an undersupply of rental properties,” he said.

Brisbane’s decline in rental availability, since 2017

[Select part of the chart to zoom in on various years, and ‘reset zoom’ button to return]

According to SQM Research, the national asking rent for houses has increased 15.9% over the past year and the asking rent for units has risen by 7.6% over the same period.

Consider:

  • Brisbane: vacancy rate 1.5%, asking rents +6.8% over the past year
  • Adelaide: vacancy rate 0.8%, asking rents +7.2%
  • Perth: vacancy rate 0.9%, asking rents +16.2%

Mr Koulizos said the pandemic had added more pressure to the already dwindling rental supply in regional areas in particular due to the increased migration of people into lifestyle areas.

“Demand for rental properties in many regional locations – such as the Sunshine Coast in Queensland, the Central Coast of New South Wales, and the South West of Western Australia – is far outweighing supply with rental prices skyrocketing over the past year,” he said.

“This critical situation is forcing some renters to move further afield because they can no longer afford to live in a region that they have sometimes called home for decades.”

Adelaide’s decline in rental availability, since 2017

[Select part of the chart to zoom in on various years, and ‘reset zoom’ button to return]

Mr Koulizos said it was imperative that policy-makers don’t make the same mistake again with investor activity still well below what is needed to improve the supply of rental properties around the nation.

“Unfortunately, the critical undersupply of rental properties is not a situation that will change overnight – just like it wasn’t a situation that happened over a short period of time either,” he said.

“It is the industry’s belief that market cycles need to be allowed to run their course without any type of outside intervention because they will always move through their peaks and troughs of their own accord.

“Instigating policies to solve a supposed short-term problem can have long-term ramifications, which is the drastic situation that tens of thousands of tenants are now experiencing.”



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