Tight Queensland rental market a result of natural disasters: REIQ

Andrea DixonMay 1, 2012

Queensland’s plague of natural disasters has been blamed for the sunshine state’s struggling rental market.

Residential vacancy rates there are mostly below 3%, which is the excepted figure for a balanced market in terms of supply and demand, according to figures released by the Real Estate Institute of Queensland (REIQ).

REIQ chief executive officer Anton Kardash says the contraction is a result of slowing house sales and disaster recovery.

“Until recently we had many potential first-home buyers and investors sitting on the sidelines while our market and economy recovered from the natural disasters last year, which has put pressure on our rental market,” he says.

Brisbane’s vacancy rate fell to 1.7% from 2.3% in December last year. The inner city was at 1.4% in March this year, down from 1.9% in December 2011.

Queensland’s major regional markets are in worse shape, with the amount of available homes to rent in regional Rockhampton at just 1%. In March last year the vacancy rate there was 1.8%, and that dipped to 0.9 % in December, reflecting rental trauma for tenants.

The resources boom town of Gladstone has a vacancy rate of just 1.4%, and a luxury four-bedroom, two-bathroom house near town will give tenants little change from $1,000 a week.

In far north Queensland the Cairns rental market is also undersupplied, with tight vacancy rate of 2.5%, showing a fall of 0.7% in 12 months. Bundaberg has shown some improvement, with vacancy rates increasing to 3.3% from 2.5% in the year to March 2012.

Queensland’s two major tourist hotspots have comparatively languishing residential rental vacancy rates.

On Noosa’s coast, residential vacancy rates have jumped from 4% in March 2011 to 4.8% this year while on the Gold Coast rates have increased from 3.6% last year to 3.9% in March 2012.