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Rent growth picked up in the start of 2024, taking rents to new record highs

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key takeaways

Key takeaways

After a 0.8% rise in April, Australian’s median rent hit a new record high of $627 per week.

Annual rent growth has re-accelerated through 2024, up from a recent low of 8.1% growth in the year to October 2023, to 8.5% in the year to April.

NEW analysis of rents by distance to CBDs shows markets within 30-40km of city centres saw the strongest reacceleration in rent growth.

In Brisbane, Jimboomba’s annual rent growth went from 3.8% to 6.4%, while Casey – North in Melbourne saw annual rent growth from 11.7% to 13.1%.
One fifth (21.3%) of SA3 markets analysed have rents below their peak:

Around 9% of SA3 rent markets were down from peaks in February or March this year, suggesting they were slipping from recent highs.

Other rent markets with more sustained declines from their peak were mostly remote, regional areas, however some pockets of the Sydney rent market were also below peaks from 2023, such as Canterbury, Pennant Hills – Epping and Parramatta.

The median weekly rent value across all Australian dwellings has hit a fresh record high of $627 per week, and rental costs range from $770 per week in Sydney, to $547 in Hobart .

Summary of median weekly rent and value change – data as of April 2024

Region Median weekly rent Monthly change in rents Quarterly change in rents Annual change inrents
Sydney $770 1.0% 3.0% 9.0%
Melbourne $589 0.8% 2.8% 9.6%
Brisbane $649 0.8% 2.1% 8.5%
Adelaide $589 0.6% 2.4% 9.1%
Perth $669 1.2% 3.9% 13.6%
Hobart $547 0.2% 2.5% -0.2%
Darwin $617 -0.3% -0.1% 3.5%
Canberra $674 0.6% 1.9% 1.8%
Combined

capitals

$659 0.9% 2.9% 9.4%
Combined

regionals

$540 0.7% 2.5% 6.4%
National $627 0.8% 2.8% 8.5%

Source: CoreLogic

Rather than rent increases being limited by affordability constraints, annual rent growth has once again started gathering pace at the start of 2024.

Nationally, annual rent growth went from a recent low of 8.1% in October 2023, to 8.5% in April.

Even markets where rents had been falling are now showing values start to steady or increase again

Figure 2 shows rolling annual growth in house and unit rents by greater capital city area.

Rolling Annual Change In Rent Values Houses And Units

Canberra house rent falls bottomed out at -3.4% in the year to September, though rents have been rising over the past seven months, taking the market back into a year-on-year increase of 1.8%.

In Hobart, house rents are back in positive growth territory, and unit rents seem close to flattening out.

Figure 3 shows regional rent growth is also back on the rise.

Rolling Annual Change In Regional Australia House And Unit Rents

Annual growth in regional unit rents bottomed out at 5.0% in the year to September and climbed back up to 6.9% in the 12 months to April.

Regional house rents have seen an even more dramatic reacceleration, where annual growth in rents has gone from 3.4% in September to 6.2% in April this year.

The pick up in regional rent growth was most pronounced in regional QLD and Tasmania houses (each saw a pick up in annual growth of 350 basis points between September 2023 and April this year).

Part of the reason for the re-acceleration in rents nationally could be due to renters being forced into more affordable, peripheral housing markets as they become priced out of more desirable and central metropolitan locations.

Areas where rents are slightly lower may offer more space for group households or have slightly less competitive rental conditions which are potentially being more targeted by prospective tenants.

This is reflected in Figure 4, which shows the average annual rent growth across SA3 regions by the average dwelling distance to the nearest CBD.

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