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Think short-stay rentals like Airbnb are out of control? Numbers are down, especially in our biggest cities


Further restrictions on short-term rental properties listed on platforms such as Airbnb and Stayz are on the table in Australia.

Public pressure to ease the housing crisis is mounting.

This makes quick-fix solutions to make housing more affordable and increasingly attractive to governments.

But any policy should be evidence-based.

So what can we learn from the latest data on short-term rentals?

Airbnb2

The findings of our analysis might surprise you:

  • short-stay listings in Australia are down more than 15% on pre-pandemic numbers
  • the number of active short-term rentals is a small fraction of the total number of dwellings in Australia and roughly equivalent to the number of new dwellings built each year
  • there has been a shift in listings to regional areas, as major city numbers have dropped sharply.

It appears higher rents and property prices in our big cities could be making short-term rentals less attractive for owners and investors.

Because housing market conditions and short-term rental impacts vary from place to place, there is no one-size-fits-all solution.

How have the numbers changed?

Short-term rental numbers have fallen significantly in Australia since December 2019.

Numbers in Australia haven’t returned to pre-pandemic levels, despite a global rebound.

Our latest data show 278,788 unique short-term rentals were listed in Australia in December 2023.

That’s well down from roughly 330,000 on the eve of the pandemic.

Short Term Rental Listings July 2016 December 2023

Of these listings, 191,123 (69%) were “active” rentals (available or booked at least one night a month).

That’s down 13% from roughly 220,000 before the pandemic.

Of the active rentals in December 2023, 167,955 (88%) were “entire home” listings.

These are rented without a host present.

The proportion of such listings has risen steadily since Airbnb emerged as a “sharing economy” phenomenon.

However, many of these already existed as purpose-built, short-term accommodation.

An example would be holiday lettings on Queensland’s Gold Coast.

All up, active unhosted short-term rentals comprise about 1.5% of Australia’s 11.1 million dwellings at any given time.

This is roughly equivalent to the number of new dwellings built each year.

How have locations shifted?

Our research team has observed significant shifts in the short-term property market since the eve of the pandemic.

The most obvious was the pandemic’s impact on the geography of short-term rentals.

As mobility restrictions and the loss of tourists affected cities the most, short-term tenants flocked to the regions.

We saw a sharp drop in listings in many metropolitan areas.



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Serendib News
Serendib News is a renowned multicultural web portal with a 17-year commitment to providing free, diverse, and multilingual print newspapers, featuring over 1000 published stories that cater to multicultural communities.

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