Rents remain low in 2010
Rents held steady across the nation last quarter, new research has found.
According to data from Australian Property Monitors, the average national rent fell just 0.3 per cent for houses and 0.5 per cent for units throughout the quarter.
You’re out of free articles for this month
To continue reading the rest of this article, please log in.
Create free account to get unlimited news articles and more!
Annual growth however is well below the long term average, sitting at just 2.8 per cent.
APM’s head of research Yvonne Chan said the annual softening of the rental market can be attributed to the large number of first home buyers, who were drawn from the rental market by historically low interest rates and the First Home Owners Boost.
“Although first homebuyer numbers have returned to normal, we are still seeing a delayed flow on effect on rental demand,” Ms Chan said.
“Despite low vacancy rates in most cities and strong employment figures, a fall in consumer sentiment in September and continued concerns over the global economy mean landlords have continued to be conservative in raising rents.”
The star performer this year is Darwin, which recorded the strongest rental growth for houses at 3.8 per cent pushing the median weekly rent to $550, the highest in the nation and $70 more than the next most expensive city of Sydney.