Skip to content
Government Federal, Property Real Estate

Essential workers locked out of rental market

Anglicare Australia 2 mins read

Anglicare Australia has released new research showing that essential workers are being priced out of the rental market across the country.

The Rental Affordability Snapshot: Essential Workers Report surveyed more than 51,000 rental listings and tested them against the wages of sixteen essential occupations.

Released as part of Anti-Poverty Week, it found that:

  • 1,117 rentals (2.3%) were affordable for an ambulance officer
  • 850 rentals (1.7%) were affordable for an aged care worker
  • 754 rentals (1.5%) were affordable for a nurse
  • 575 rentals (1.1%) were affordable for a construction worker
  • 417 rentals (0.8%) were affordable for an early childhood educator
  • 417 rentals (0.8%) were affordable for a hospitality worker.
  • In most regional areas, less than 5 percent of rentals were affordable for a cleaner.

“It is a national disgrace that the people we all rely on – nurses, teachers, care workers, cleaners – cannot afford a secure place to live,” Anglicare Australia Executive Director Kasy Chambers said.

“This report shows that even full-time workers in critical jobs are locked out of most rentals. In many parts of the country, affordability has gone backwards. A hospitality worker could not afford a single property in the ACT, only five in the Northern Territory, and just 80 across the whole of Victoria.

“These results show that the housing crisis is now hurting the people who hold our communities together. If they cannot afford to live where they work, then schools, hospitals, and aged care homes will struggle to keep running.”

Ms Chambers said governments cannot keep leaving housing to the private market.

“For decades, governments have walked away from providing housing and instead propped up private investors with billions in tax concessions. The result is a system that works for investors, but shuts out everyone else," Ms Chambers said.

“The solution is clear. We need tax reform to stop pushing up the cost of housing. We need to build at least 25,000 new public and community homes each year – rentals that essential workers can actually afford. And we need stronger protections for renters, so people are not left at the mercy of an unfair system.

“The housing crisis is not an accident. It is the result of choices. These results are shocking, but they are also an opportunity for governments to change course and ensure that everyone has a safe, affordable home.”

The report includes state and regional data. 


Contact details:

Sofie Wainwright 0403 920 301 // Lauren Ferri 0422 581 506 

More from this category

  • Government Federal
  • 08/12/2025
  • 08:00
Catholic Health Australia

CHA backs government’s private health funding reform

Catholic Health Australia (CHA) said the Government's proposal to introduce a Private National Efficient Price (PNEP) for private hospital funding is a long-overdue reform that has the potential to deliver fair, transparent and sustainable funding for essential care. CHA Interim CEO Kathy Hilyard said decisive action on the PNEP would address long-standing problems in the private hospital system which, for too long, has operated under fragmented, opaque, and inefficient funding arrangements. “A nationally consistent price for private hospital care is a much-needed reform that will put our member hospitals on a more sustainable footing,” Ms Hilyard said. “The current system,…

  • Government Federal
  • 05/12/2025
  • 12:07
Doctors Reform Society

Specialist Fees Denying Patient Access to Care: Time to Act

Specialist Fees Denying Patient Access to Care: Time to Act “Reports that specialist fees are skyrocketing and reducing access of patients to specialist care are very concerning and long in the making” said Dr Tim Woodruff, President, Doctors Reform Society. “The Federal Government has been very slow to act on this issue despite repeated advice””, said Dr Woodruff. “We have long recommended dedicated federal funding to state governments to be used specifically to increase their specialist outpatient facilities, with the amount based on measured need in the community. We have also recently recommended that community specialist medical centres should be…

  • Government Federal, LGBTQIA
  • 04/12/2025
  • 17:08
Health Equity Matters

Health Equity Matters commends investment to support 2030 HIV elimination goal

MEDIA RELEASE Health Equity Matters commends investment to support 2030 HIV elimination goal Health Equity Matters has commended the Australian Government's announcement of $41.7 million over three years to support progress toward eliminating HIV transmission in Australia by 2030. The funding, announced by Health Minister Mark Butler, will support HIV awareness, prevention, testing and treatment programs targeting under-serviced populations, including $14.1 million for Health Equity Matters and the National Association of People with HIV Australia. "The Minister is right that Australia can be the first country to achieve virtual elimination of HIV transmission. This $41.7 million investment in community-led programs,…

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.