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Disclaimer: Median rents are approximate based on 2025 market data. Actual rents vary significantly by suburb. The 30% rule is a general guideline - your ideal ratio depends on your full financial situation.

How much rent can you actually afford in Australia?

The most common rule of thumb in Australia is the 30% rule: spend no more than 30% of your gross income on rent. Anything above that is officially considered "housing stress" by the Australian Bureau of Statistics. But the 30% rule is a starting point, not a hard law - your real comfort zone depends on your debt, dependents, lifestyle, and how stable your income is. New migrants and visa holders often pay above 30% in the first year and rebalance later when they have stronger rental history and higher local income.

The calculator above gives you a quick affordability ratio. This section explains what numbers to plan for beyond just the weekly rent - bond, advance, application fees, and ongoing costs that bite if you don't budget for them.

The 30% rule in practice

Gross household income30% (comfortable)35% (stretched)40% (housing stress)
$60,000/year$346/week$404/week$462/week
$80,000/year$462/week$538/week$615/week
$100,000/year$577/week$673/week$769/week
$120,000/year$692/week$808/week$923/week
$150,000/year$865/week$1,010/week$1,154/week
$200,000/year$1,154/week$1,346/week$1,538/week

Median rents in Australia's capital cities

Rents have risen sharply across most cities since 2022. As of early 2025, indicative weekly medians for a unit/apartment look roughly like this:

Source: SQM Research and Domain rental reports, indicative 2025 figures. Prices vary by 30-60% within each city by suburb.

Upfront costs when signing a lease

For a $600/week rental, plan on having around $3,600 in cash ready at signing (bond + 2 weeks advance) and another $1,500-$3,000 for moving, connections and basic furniture.

Frequently asked questions

I'm new to Australia with no rental history - how do I compete?

This is the single biggest pain point for new migrants. Strategies that work: pay 3-6 months rent in advance if you can afford it (legal in most states even though agents sometimes claim it isn't), provide an employer letter confirming your salary and role, get a reference from an overseas landlord (with translated/notarised contact details), offer to pay an extra week's rent in advance, and target property managers and landlords who advertise as "international friendly". Sharehouses and room rentals are also more flexible than full leases.

Is "rent in advance" the same as the bond?

No. Bond is the security deposit held by the state-government bond authority and returned to you when you move out (minus any deductions for damage). Rent in advance is regular rent payment for the upcoming period; it counts toward your rent ledger and is not refundable. Most leases require both, and they're paid at the same time.

How long are leases usually for?

Standard residential leases run for 6 or 12 months. After the fixed term ends, you typically move to a month-to-month "continuing" or "periodic" lease unless you sign a new fixed-term agreement. Breaking a lease early usually means paying re-letting fees plus rent until a new tenant is found - typically 1-4 weeks rent.

Can a landlord increase my rent during a lease?

Not during a fixed-term lease (the rent is fixed for the entire term). On a periodic lease, landlords can typically increase rent with 60 days written notice, and most states limit increases to once per 12 months. Excessive increases can be challenged at the state tenancy tribunal (NCAT in NSW, VCAT in Victoria, QCAT in Queensland, etc.).

What about Commonwealth Rent Assistance?

Commonwealth Rent Assistance (CRA) is a Centrelink payment that helps with rent if you're receiving certain other payments - JobSeeker, Youth Allowance, Age Pension, Parenting Payment, FTB Part A above the base rate, etc. Rates vary by family situation and rent level; a single person can receive up to around $211/fortnight in 2025-26. PR holders generally qualify; most temporary visa holders don't.

Sharehouse vs solo rental - what works financially?

Sharehouses cut rent costs by 40-70% in capital cities. The trade-off is less privacy, shared utilities (always confirm whose name bills are in), and dependency on housemate reliability. For new arrivals, a sharehouse for the first 6-12 months often makes more sense than committing to a solo lease before you've found stable work and figured out where you want to live long-term.

What this calculator doesn't include

For state-specific tenancy rules and dispute resolution, check your state's rental authority: NSW Tenants' Union, Consumer Affairs Victoria, or your state's equivalent.

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