Skip to content
Political, Property Real Estate

Aussies on lowest incomes priced out of rentals

Everybody's Home 3 mins read

A new Everybody’s Home report reveals that Australians on the lowest incomes are being priced out of renting in virtually every corner of the country, despite a rise in Centrelink payments and rent assistance. 

The ‘Priced Out’ 2024 report shows people who primarily rely on Centrelink payments and the full-time minimum wage would be in severe rental stress across all capital cities and most regional areas. 

The report applies Friday’s indexation increase to Centrelink payments and 10 percent rise to Commonwealth Rent Assistance (CRA) with indexation on top, with the findings underscoring the need for more social housing and for payments to reflect the cost of housing.  

Key findings include: 

  • Single JobSeeker recipients are facing acute rental stress, and would have to spend all their income or more on unit rents in most capital cities and 10 regional areas

  • Those relying on the Age Pension, Disability Support Pension or working full-time on the minimum wage would likely be in severe rental stress in almost every part of the country

  • Based on capital city rents, people on the Age Pension and Disability Support Pension would be left with $8 a day after paying rent, while a person on the minimum wage would be left with a little over $25 a day. A person on JobSeeker would be left with $0 and have to find $122 on top of their income.

  • The most unaffordable areas outside of the capital cities include the Gold Coast, Northern WA, Sunshine Coast, and Wollongong, where people primarily living on Centrelink payments, or the minimum wage would have to spend at least half their income on rent.

Everybody’s Home spokesperson Maiy Azize said: “People on the lowest incomes in Australia are being priced out of renting in every corner of our country.

“From those who rely on Centrelink payments to those working full-time on the minimum wage with no income support at all, there’s virtually nowhere in Australia for people on low incomes to afford a rental without falling into crippling housing stress.

“People on JobSeeker are being slammed by sky-high rents and payments below the poverty line – in many areas they’d have to spend all their income plus find more cash just to make the weekly rent. 

“People on the lowest incomes are falling through the cracks - they’re becoming homeless, sharehousing well into their adult years, living in overcrowded homes, and unable to move out of the family home because there simply isn’t enough affordable housing for them. Even if they are willing to leave their communities, the pursuit to find and secure an affordable home elsewhere is dire. 

“Minimal increases to these payments are falling short of what people actually need, being eclipsed by high rents, bills and the cost of essential goods. We need the federal government to raise Centrelink payments so they don’t fall below the poverty line, and set these payments so they don’t fall behind the real cost of living and housing.

“We need a huge boost to social housing – the shortfall today is 640,000 homes and within two decades it’s set to reach close to one million. This desperate need for social housing doesn’t go away by hoping the private market will make homes affordable. That is the status quo, and it is clearly failing.

“To make housing more affordable for more Australians, the federal government must increase Centrelink payments, protect renters from unfair rent increases, scrap unfair tax handouts to property investors, and create much more social housing.

“The time for real action on housing affordability has never been greater but it will only get worse without it.” 

The ‘Priced Out’ report includes local and regional statistics. 

Media contact: Sofie Wainwright 0403 920 301

More from this category

  • Local Government, Property Real Estate
  • 14/11/2024
  • 17:43
USU

Kiama Council depot decision doesn’t stack up

The United Services Union has serious concerns regarding the financial viability of today’s decision to shut the Kiama Municipal Council central Kiama depot where road, parks, and maintenance council workers ply their trade. The United Services Union (USU) represents council workers at Kiama Municipal Council. The council is proposing to move staff to a new site in Minnamurra at the current waste facility and reclassify the current depot as residential. The union understands the current central depot is built on a former gas works site and has serious concerns regarding the overall cost in remediating the site to make it…

  • Political
  • 14/11/2024
  • 11:02
Rewiring Australia

Rewiring Australia welcomes huge rooftop solar milestone

Rewiring Australia has called for further household electrification incentives after Australia hit the incredible milestone of four million homes with rooftop solar. “Australian households are showing the world how to reduce emissions and bills and electrification will deliver even greater impact,” said Dan Cass, Executive Director of Rewiring Australia. “This country’s rooftop solar is the world’s cheapest-delivered source of energy and that is what is driving this household energy revolution. “The 4 million household milestone is a momentous achievement that demonstrates the power of community action and smart government policy.” One in three Australian homes now have solar panels installed.…

  • Government Federal, Political
  • 14/11/2024
  • 10:57
IJM Australia

Digital Duty of Care a Necessary Step for Online Safety Act Reform

International Justice Mission (IJM) Australia welcomes the Minister for Communications Michelle Rowland’sannouncementovernight that the Australian Government will develop and legislate a digital duty of care in its response to a key recommendation in the Online Safety Act review. IJM Australia CEO, David Braga, said, “Together with survivors of online sexual exploitation of children and child protection advocates right around Australia, International Justice Mission has called for a legal duty of care to be imposed on tech companies in our country as part of the Albanese Government’s response to the Online Safety Act review, and we warmly welcome this important announcement…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.