10 Aussie suburbs where share houses are growing in popularity
A myriad of property and economic headwinds stirring within Australian society over recent months has inspired surging activity on one houseshare accommodation website.
Flatmates.com.au has revealed that the nation’s rental crisis, and subsequent scarcity of available rentals that has vacancy rates across a large portion of the country sitting below 1 per cent, meant a record number of members (69,400) joined the site in May.
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Such has been the rapid tightening of the national rental market that May’s membership uptick is 36.6 per cent higher than the number who joined in April and just over 100 per cent higher than May 2022.
According to Claudia Conley, Flatmates’ community manager, the increased demand for Australia share houses has occurred over the past six months, with traffic on the site “starting to increase in October last year and has not died down, even after our usual ‘peak season’ ended at the end of February”.
East Perth is the Australian market with the worst ratio of property seekers to room listings, with 255 people seeking shared accommodation and zero rooms available, making it the most in-demand suburb in the country, followed by Northbridge, Western Australia, which had 164 property seekers and just one available room.
The rest of the top 10 in-demand Australian share house suburbs are:
- Sydney, NSW – 133 listings, 0 available rooms
- Cremorne, Victoria – 120 listings, 0 available rooms
- Holland Park, Queensland – 119 listings, one available room
- Barangaroo, NSW – 106 listings, 0 available rooms
- Henley Beach, SA – 102 listings, one available room
- Milton, Queensland – 288 listings, three available rooms
- Highgate, WA – 95 listings, one available room
- East Melbourne, Victoria – 277 listings, three available rooms
Ms Conley revealed the demographic of the site is shifting, even if the core age group of Flatmates.com.au members remain between 25 and 34.
“Members under the age of 35 have decreased 10 per cent in the past year, and members aged 46-65 have increased by 10 per cent,” she explained.
“For our younger demographic who have the option, many are choosing to stay at home for longer due to the rising cost of living. Our older demographic may be looking to rent out their spare room for extra cash as the cost of living bites.”
In a sad twist, she also revealed that a growing number of the site’s older members are motivated to join the site by reasons other than financial, with “companionship, fighting loneliness, the safety of having someone around and someone to share household chores with just some of the many benefits associated with shared living”.