Australia experienced a significant tightening in the rental market from 2022 onwards, characterised by falling vacancy rates, rapid rental growth, and increased demand from renters unable to afford property purchases. This environment has had material implications for property investors.
Causes of the rental tightening. Post-pandemic demand recovery, rapid net overseas migration reaching record levels in 2022–2023, reduced investor activity during the interest rate rising cycle (reducing rental stock), and the long-term undersupply of housing all contributed to the tightened rental market.
National vacancy rates. Vacancy rates in most capital cities fell to historic lows of 0.5–1.5% in 2023–2024, well below the 3% considered a balanced market. This indicates severe competition for available rental properties.
Rental growth. In markets with very low vacancy, rents rose rapidly — in some markets, 15–25% over 18 months. This materially improved the cash flow position of established investment properties.
Implications for investors:
Positive yield impact. Higher rents improve rental yield, reducing the cash shortfall on negatively geared properties and potentially turning previously negatively geared properties cash-flow neutral or positive.
New entrant challenge. Despite strong rental demand, high purchase prices and elevated interest rates have tested borrowing capacity for new investors. The net yield on new acquisitions has not always improved proportionally to rental growth.
Future outlook. Government initiatives to accelerate housing supply and moderate migration levels are intended to ease rental market pressures over the medium term, though structural supply deficits take years to resolve.

