Aussie tenants have almost no hope of avoiding a rental hike, with just 2 per cent relocating without a price jump in the past year.
Nine in 10 tenants nationwide are paying more in rent than they were in the 12 months to June, with one in six being asked to fork out for a 25 per cent surge, according to New research from Better Renting.
Their annual Cost of Renting report found most of them faced a 10 per cent increase.
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But of the more than 1000 tenants surveyed around the country just 16 were able to find an alternative rental without having to pay more.
Better Renting executive director Joel Dignam said the nation wasn’t doing enough to protect tenants, and the reforms that had been introduced didn’t line up with the intensity of the challenges renters were facing.
“It sort of feels like a few tweaks and what’s needed is a much bigger commitment to reform,” Mr Dignam said.
“I can look back at this period and say the protections that should have been in place when the market was really tight weren’t there, and that’s part of what allowed this to happen.”
He added that although in some parts of the country the rental market was beginning to soften, the damage had already been done.
“People have been living through this for a while now and it really takes a toll on people. I don’t think that goes away just because your next rent increase is a bit smaller.”
Despite a raft of new rental measures introduced in part of the nation — like Victoria and New South Wales proposing no-grounds evictions — Renters and Housing Union secretary Harry Millward said they didn’t go far enough.
“There’s basically no rentals in Australia that someone on Centrelink or a single parent would be able to afford,” Mr Millward said
“People are jamming into smaller and smaller share houses to save every little bit of money they can. It’s a tragedy.
“If we’re going to treat a home as a human right, then reforms need to be made that take away or at least release people from the market mechanisms of housing.”
Victorian tenant Gemma said these days, renters were spending more than 50 per cent of their income on their lease, especially if they were a single parent.
“You’re struggling with the payments, but you can’t afford to move somewhere else either,” she said.
“If you want to relocate, you need about $6000 in the bank. I try to save, but it would take years for me to save that much. And then you spend it all on the move and have to save it all up again.
“It’s getting a bit ridiculous.”
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sarah.petty@news.com.au
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