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AAP
Business
Poppy Johnston

Rentals under $400 disappearing as prices surge

New data shows affordable rental accommodation is vanishing from the capitals at a faster rate. (Lukas Coch/AAP PHOTOS) (AAP)

Cheap rentals are rapidly disappearing from Australia's major capital cities as demand shifts back to urban centres.

Low-cost rentals disappeared from regional areas more quickly during the COVID-19 pandemic, but new PropTrack data shows inexpensive rental accommodation is now vanishing from the capitals at a faster rate.

The share of dwellings advertised on property site realestate.com.au across Australia's capital cities for less than $400 has sunk from 31.5 per cent in February 2022 to 14.6 per cent last month.

Across the regions, that share has fallen more modestly from 37.8 per cent in February to 25.9 per cent 12 months later.

PropTrack's Cameron Kusher said demand for rentals was outpacing supply, driving up weekly rents and keeping vacancy rates low.

"As a result, there has been a significant reduction in rentals available for less than $400 per week since the onset of the pandemic," he said.

Overall, the share of advertised rental listings on the property site below $400 a week has plummeted to its lowest level since late 2018.

The share has fallen from 32.8 per cent in February 2022 to 17.6 per cent 12 months later.

"The fall in the availability of more affordable rentals and the surging competition for rental stock is creating challenges for those on lower incomes or government support payments as they try to source increasingly scarce rental accommodation," Mr Kusher said.

He said demand for rentals was expected to rise and keep upwards pressure on prices.

A separate report released by CoreLogic reveals the gap between home ownership according to gender.

Home ownership tends to be higher for men than women, with men associated with 3.1 per cent more of the housing stock than women.

The discrepancy widens for investment properties, with men owning seven percentage points more of Australia's investment properties than women.

CoreLogic head of Australian research and report author Eliza Owen said were several factors holding back female home ownership, including that men, on average, earn more than women.

"In past reports, we have noted the role of the gender wage gap potentially contributing to women falling behind on asset accumulation, particularly where it may take women longer on average, to accumulate a deposit for a home," Ms Owen said.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers told parliament the government recognised renters were "doing it tough" and there were not enough rental properties.

"The best way for us to deal with this is build more properties and that is what we intend to do," Dr Chalmers said.

He said labour shortages and rising building material costs were making it more difficult to bring on supply, but the government was seeking to drive investment through a new housing fund.

Greens spokesman Max Chandler-Mather said Labor's "dodgy plan" would see the social and affordable housing shortage worsen.

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