Renting in Australia: The Shocking Truth Most Migrants Discover After They Land

Reading Time: 14 minutes

The catch-22 of renting in Australia as a new migrant is precise and unforgiving. You need a rental history to get approved for a rental. You cannot have a rental history if you have never rented here. The system does not explain this to you on arrival. It simply shows you, property by property, that the evidence you have built over years of financial responsibility in another country does not transfer. You are not a bad tenant. You are an information problem in a risk-averse market, and there is a significant difference between those two things.

More than 70% of newly arrived migrants rent for their first two to three years in Australia before transitioning to homeownership. As of January 2026, there were 2.98 million temporary visa holders in Australia, the highest number on record. All of them need somewhere to live. Most of them will spend months attempting to navigate a rental market that has tightened by 31% since 2021, with vacancy rates near historic lows and annual rental growth running at 5.5%. The conditions for renting in Australia have not been this difficult for new arrivals in a generation. Understanding the system before you apply is not optional preparation. It is the difference between months of rejection and a signed lease.

This guide covers what the rental application process actually demands, what the bond system is and how it works across different states, what your legal rights are as a tenant once you are in, and what migrants consistently get wrong in the application process. It will not tell you the market is kind. It will tell you how to navigate it.

NOTE: All rental figures, bond rules, and tenant rights information reflect current conditions as of this revision. Tenancy law is managed at state and territory level in Australia and changes regularly. Verify current rules with your state’s consumer affairs or fair trading body.

Renting is one part of the arrival picture. For the full account of what moving to Australia actually demands, including the visa process, the cost of living, the social adjustment, and the first six months nobody maps out for you, read: Moving to Australia: The Unfiltered Reality Most Migrants Learn Too Late. For what daily costs look like once you are housed, read Cost of Living in Australia for Migrants.

Table of Contents

What Renting in Australia Looks Like in 2026

The structural reality of renting in Australia for migrants comes from two intersecting conditions. The first is supply. Australia has not built enough housing to match its population growth. The National Housing Accord target of 1.2 million new homes by the end of the decade was set partly in response to migration-driven demand, but construction is running well below the required rate. The second is demand. More than 1.46 million net migrants have arrived since the end of 2019. They overwhelmingly rent first. When that many people enter a tight rental market simultaneously, the vacancy rate falls, landlords gain leverage, and the selection process for available properties becomes considerably more competitive.

What this means in practice is that property managers, the people who actually process rental applications, are not choosing the most deserving tenant. They are selecting the lowest-risk applicant from a pool of legitimate candidates. For a new migrant, that framing changes how you approach every step of the application.

Renting in Australia in 2026 means competing in a market where national median rents sit at AUD $665 to $685 per week, vacancy rates are near historic lows across most capital cities, and the application process requires documentation that most new arrivals do not yet have. The rental market was not designed around the migrant experience. It runs on Australian credit history, Australian rental references, and Australian payslips, none of which a person who landed last week can produce.

Aerial night view of Sydney's densely packed urban landscape with illuminated buildings, representing the high cost of living in Australia for migrants facing some of the highest median weekly rents in the country.
The lights of Sydney are aspirational. The cost of Sydney is structural. Migrants who understand the difference between the two arrive prepared.

The Bond: What It Is and What It Actually Costs

How much you need before you move in

In most Australian states, the maximum bond a landlord can charge is the equivalent of four weeks’ rent. In addition to the bond, you will typically pay your first month’s rent in advance before receiving the keys. In Sydney, where average weekly house rents sit at AUD $780, this means having between AUD $6,000 and $8,000 in accessible funds before you have earned a single dollar of local income. In Melbourne the equivalent figure is around AUD $4,700 to $5,800. In Adelaide, the most affordable major city, it is approximately AUD $4,100 to $4,800. The bond is not rent. It is a separate upfront cost that comes before the first month’s payment.

Where your bond actually goes

This is the part most migrants do not know before they arrive. Your bond does not sit with the landlord or the property manager. It is lodged with an independent government bond authority specific to your state. In New South Wales, bonds are held by NSW Fair Trading through the Rental Bonds Online (RBO) system. In Victoria, by the Residential Tenancies Bond Authority (RTBA). In Queensland, by the Residential Tenancies Authority (RTA). In South Australia, by Consumer and Business Services (CBS). This means that if your landlord wants to make a claim against your bond at the end of the tenancy, they must apply to the bond authority and, if you dispute it, a tribunal determines the outcome. Your bond is protected by law, not by the goodwill of the person you are renting from.

Where Your Bond Is Held — By State
New South Wales
NSW Fair Trading
Rental Bonds Online (RBO) system. Bond lodged within 10 working days.
Victoria
Residential Tenancies Bond Authority (RTBA)
Portable Bond Scheme available from July 2026. Direct lodgement via RTBA.
Queensland
Residential Tenancies Authority (RTA)
Bond lodged within 10 days of receipt. Online lodgement via RTA Bond Management.
South Australia
Consumer and Business Services (CBS)
Mandatory Form A1 application from January 2026. Online bond lodgement via RBO SA.
Western Australia
Bonds WA
Pet bond of up to AUD $350 applies in addition to standard bond from March 2026.
ACT / Tasmania / NT
Respective Territory Authorities
Bond rules vary. Check your territory's consumer affairs body for current lodgement requirements.

Bond authorities hold your money independently. Your landlord cannot access it without applying to the authority. If you dispute a claim, a state tribunal determines the outcome.

The 2026 bond changes worth knowing

Victoria introduced a Portable Rental Bond Scheme from 1 July 2026, which allows tenants to transfer their existing bond to a new rental property rather than paying a fresh bond upfront when they move. For migrants who have established a first tenancy and are now looking for a more permanent home, this removes one of the more significant financial barriers of moving. New South Wales has announced similar plans. Western Australia increased its pet bond cap to AUD $350 from March 2026. South Australia made a standardised rental application form (Form A1) mandatory from January 2026, which also restricts what personal information landlords can request from applicants.

A rental bond in Australia is a security deposit paid at the start of a tenancy, typically equivalent to four weeks’ rent, held by an independent government bond authority rather than the landlord. It is returned at the end of the tenancy if no damage, unpaid rent, or lease breaches are recorded. In most states the bond must be lodged with the relevant authority within 10 working days of being collected.

How the Rental Application Process Works

What property managers are actually looking at

Property managers are assessing the probability that you will pay rent on time, maintain the property, and not cause a dispute that costs the landlord time and money. Every document you submit is evidence that moves you closer to or further from that assessment of low risk. The documents that carry the most weight are proof of current income (payslips or an employment letter from your Australian employer), bank statements showing sufficient funds to cover the bond and advance rent, identity documents from the 100-point ID system, and your previous rental history.

The 100-point ID check typically requires a combination of your passport (70 points), visa grant notice or other immigration documents (40 points), and supporting documents such as a driver’s licence, Medicare card, or bank statements. For new arrivals who do not yet have Australian documents beyond their passport and visa, this is manageable but requires preparation. Have clean PDF copies of everything ready before you start applying.

The 100-Point ID Check — What Each Document Is Worth
Passport
70 pts
Visa grant notice
40 pts
Driver's licence
25 pts
Medicare card
25 pts
Bank statement
25 pts
Target total 100 points

Passport (70) + visa grant notice (40) already reaches 110 points. Supporting documents fill the gap if you do not yet have Australian-issued ID. Point values vary by property manager — requirements are not legislated.

The platforms and how they work

Most rental listings in Australia are posted on realestate.com.au or Domain. Applications are typically submitted through third-party platforms including 2Apply, Ignite, and Snug, depending on which the property manager uses. These platforms allow you to build a profile that you can reuse across multiple applications, attach your documents, and receive status updates. Properties in tight markets move quickly. Attending inspections in person, not just virtually, and submitting within hours of an inspection rather than days, materially improves your chances.

A rental application in Australia requires identity documents worth 100 points, proof of income, rental history, personal references, and bank statements. Applications are submitted online through platforms including realestate.com.au, Domain, 2Apply, Ignite, and Snug. Property managers assess risk, not just income. The applicant who can most clearly demonstrate they will pay rent on time and care for the property consistently wins over the applicant with a higher income but less documentation.

Where to Search and How to Apply
Search for listings
R
realestate.com.au
Largest listing database in Australia. Search by suburb, price, and inspection times.
D
Domain
Strong in Sydney and Melbourne. Often lists properties 24 to 48 hours before other platforms.
Submit your application through
2Apply
Profile reusable across multiple agents
Ignite
Used widely by Ray White and other major agencies
Snug
Tracks application status and inspection bookings

Build your profile on all three application platforms before you start inspecting. When you find the right property, you can submit within minutes rather than hours.

The Reference Problem: What to Do When You Have No Australian History

This is where the migrant experience diverges most sharply from the standard rental guide. Australian property managers want an Australian rental ledger from a previous landlord showing on-time payments, and personal references from people the applicant knows in Australia. A new migrant has neither. What you can substitute is evidence that replaces the Australian record with equivalent proof of financial reliability from elsewhere.

Property managers cannot assess a rental history they cannot verify. Your overseas track record is not invisible to them because it is bad. It is invisible because they have no mechanism to verify it. Your job is to provide so much other verifiable evidence that the absent rental history becomes the least interesting thing about your application.

Renting in Australia as a migrant — a couple reviewing a rental application with a property manager, navigating the documentation process without Australian rental history
The application is not about deserve. It is about evidence. Property managers do not pick the best tenant. They eliminate the riskiest one.

What to prepare instead

An employer reference letter on company letterhead confirming your employment, salary, and start date is the single most useful document a new migrant can submit. If you have a job offer or have already started work, this letter carries significant weight because it demonstrates stable income from an Australian source. Bank statements showing three to six months of regular savings or income provide a financial track record even without a local rental history. An overseas rental reference from your previous landlord or property manager, translated into English and accompanied by contact details, demonstrates rental reliability even if the agent cannot easily verify it. Some applicants offer a larger bond than the standard four weeks as a signal of financial commitment, though this is not always permitted depending on the state.

A brief cover letter explaining your situation, your arrival date, your employer, and your financial position is used by fewer than one in ten applicants. Property managers who receive them consistently say they help. For a new migrant competing against local applicants with existing references, a clear, professional cover letter is one of the few low-effort, high-return actions available.

Tenant Rights in Australia: What the System Actually Protects

Protection 01
No-grounds evictions
New South Wales banned no-grounds evictions for most tenants through legislation passed in late 2024, with changes rolling through 2025 and 2026. Other states are following. Landlords must now provide a valid reason to end a tenancy — renovation, genuine sale, or a lease breach. For migrants who previously faced the anxiety of being asked to leave without explanation, this change provides real and enforceable security.
Protection 02
Rent increases
Rent can only be increased once in any 12-month period in most Australian states. A minimum of 60 days written notice is required before the increase takes effect. In South Australia, landlords cannot advertise rent ranges or invite offers above the listed price. Similar restrictions are being introduced across other states. If you believe a rent increase is unreasonable, you can apply to your state tribunal for a review.
Protection 03
Entry rights and privacy
Your landlord or property manager cannot enter your rental without notice except in genuine emergencies. Standard entry requires at least 24 to 48 hours written notice depending on the state. Routine inspections are limited to once per quarter. Any entry outside these conditions is a breach of your tenancy agreement and your legal right to quiet enjoyment of the property.
Protection 04
Dispute resolution
Every state has a free or low-cost tribunal for tenancy disputes — no lawyer required. NSW: NCAT. Victoria: VCAT. Queensland: QCAT. South Australia: SACAT. These tribunals handle bond disputes, repair failures, entry violations, and unlawful evictions. They are accessible regardless of visa status or familiarity with Australian legal systems. Contact your state's tenants advice service before a tribunal hearing if you need support.
Tenants in Australia are protected by state and territory residential tenancy legislation covering bond protection, rent increase limits, minimum notice periods for entry and termination, and access to dispute resolution tribunals. These protections apply regardless of visa status. Renting in Australia as a migrant does not reduce your legal rights as a tenant once a lease has been signed.

Renting in Australia by City: What Changes

The rental market in Australia is not a single market. It is five or six distinct markets operating under different state laws, different supply conditions, and different community dynamics. The city you rent in changes not just the cost but the competition, the required documentation, the notice periods, and in some cases the bond rules.

Community networks are not incidental to the rental search. They are structural. The migrant who arrives with a contact who can provide a local reference, offer short-term accommodation while the search is underway, or recommend a property manager who understands the migrant applicant profile has a measurable advantage over the one who arrives alone. 

Sydney
$780
Avg weekly house rent
Tightest vacancy. Largest Filipino and migrant community networks. Bond authority: NSW Fair Trading
Melbourne
$580
Avg weekly house rent
Portable bond scheme from July 2026. Strong South Asian and Southeast Asian networks. Bond authority: RTBA
Brisbane
$620
Avg weekly house rent
Fast-growing market. Lower upfront costs than Sydney. Bond authority: Queensland RTA
Perth
$650
Avg weekly house rent
Resources sector drives higher incomes. Pet bond unique to WA ($350 from March 2026). Bond authority: Bonds WA
Adelaide
$530
Avg weekly house rent
Most affordable major city. Mandatory Form A1 application from January 2026. Bond authority: CBS South Australia
Canberra
$680
Avg weekly house rent
Home to public service roles and international institutions. Strong rental demand from government workers and diplomats. Bond authority: Access Canberra
A Melbourne tram travelling along a city street with pedestrians and buildings in the background, illustrating public transport options for migrants managing the cost of living in Australia for migrants.
Transport in Australia is not a lifestyle choice. It is a financial decision determined entirely by where you land. Migrants who choose their suburb based on transport save more than they spend.

Read The Architecture of Life in Australia for a deeper look at how community and social infrastructure actually work here. For Filipinos navigating the specific adjustment between Filipino and Australian social expectations, The Quiet Cost of Australian Space and Filipino Closeness covers what no rental guide addresses.

Common Mistakes That Cost Migrants Rental Applications

The mistakes that sink rental applications for new migrants are almost always documentation failures or timing failures, not character failures. Every item on this list was preventable.

1
Applying for properties above their realistic budget
Property managers check the ratio of weekly rent to stated income. The benchmark is rent should not exceed 30% of gross income. On AUD $90,000 annually, a $700 per week property reads comfortably. If your employment is new or part-time, that application will be rejected in favour of someone whose numbers are more conservative.
2
Submitting incomplete documentation
A missing payslip, an unsigned reference letter, or bank statements that do not cover the required period will often result in automatic rejection, not a request to resubmit. Property managers processing dozens of applications have no incentive to chase missing paperwork from one applicant when the next one has everything ready.
3
Not attending the physical inspection
Submitting an application for a property you have not inspected in person signals lower commitment in a competitive market. Property managers notice who showed up, who engaged with the space, and who asked informed questions. Attending in person is one of the lowest-effort signals of serious intent available to you.
4
Applying too broadly and too slowly
Applying for 20 properties without prioritising means you are unlikely to have submitted the most competitive version of your application to the properties you actually want. Applying slowly means the property is already leased before your application is processed. Prioritise, prepare, and submit within hours of the inspection.
5
Not including a cover letter
Fewer than 10% of applicants submit a cover letter. For a migrant with no Australian rental history, a clear professional paragraph explaining your situation, your employment, your financial position, and your reasons for choosing the property makes you a person rather than an information deficit in a property manager's inbox.
6
Assuming the first rental needs to be the right rental
Many experienced migrants describe their first Australian tenancy as a tactical one: a serviced apartment, a short-term share house, or a transitional rental that buys them time to build local evidence. The second rental application, made with an Australian rental reference, Australian payslips, and an established bank account, is consistently easier than the first.
2HotTravellers Perspective

The rental market in Australia is not hostile to migrants. It is indifferent to them in the specific way that all risk-based systems are indifferent to people who cannot be easily categorised. Property managers do not reject migrant applications because they distrust migrants. They reject applications that do not contain enough verifiable information to make a confident decision, and new migrants structurally produce those applications because they have not yet been in Australia long enough to generate the paper trail the system requires.

This distinction matters because it changes what you do about it. If the problem is hostility, the solution is advocacy. If the problem is information, the solution is documentation. The migrant who arrives understanding that they are an information problem in a risk-averse market will spend their first weeks building a paper trail rather than nursing a grievance. The employment letter, the bank statements, the cover letter, the overseas reference: these are not concessions to an unfair system. They are the language the system speaks, and speaking it fluently is the fastest route through it.

The rental market does not ask whether you deserve to live here. It asks whether it can verify that you will pay your rent. Those are different questions with different answers. The migrant who understands this distinction arrives better prepared for both.

There is also something worth naming about what renting in a tight market does to the psychology of arrival. The search for housing is not a neutral administrative task. It is the first sustained encounter with a country that does not yet know you, competing for shelter in a market where your absence of local history is visible in every field of every application form. For people arriving from collectivist cultures where housing is embedded in family and community networks, the isolation of that search is particular. The practical advice to use community networks, stay temporarily with contacts, or access migrant settlement services is not a soft suggestion. It is the fastest structural solution to what is otherwise a circular problem: you cannot get a rental without local references, and you cannot build local references without a rental.

Frequently Asked Questions About Renting in Australia

How much is the rental bond in Australia?

In most Australian states and territories, the maximum bond a landlord can charge is equivalent to four weeks' rent. For a property renting at AUD $650 per week, this means a bond of AUD $2,600. Some high-value properties in certain states can attract higher bonds. The bond is held by a government bond authority, not the landlord, and is returned at the end of the tenancy if no legitimate claim is made against it. In Western Australia, a separate pet bond of up to AUD $350 can also apply.

Can a landlord in Australia evict me without a reason?

This depends on your state and the terms of your lease. New South Wales banned no-grounds evictions for most residential tenancies through legislation passed in late 2024, with changes rolling through 2025 and into 2026. Other states are at different stages of introducing similar protections. In states where no-grounds evictions remain possible, they typically require significant notice, commonly 90 days or more. Check the current tenancy law for your state with the relevant consumer affairs or fair trading body.

How often can rent be increased in Australia?

In most Australian states, rent can only be increased once in any 12-month period. Landlords must provide written notice before a rent increase takes effect, typically 60 days in advance. Landlords cannot solicit or accept rent offers above the advertised price in South Australia and several other states. If you believe a rent increase is unreasonable, you can apply to the relevant state tribunal for a review.

What documents do I need for a rental application in Australia?

A standard rental application in Australia requires identity documents meeting the 100-point ID check, typically your passport plus visa documentation, proof of income such as payslips or an employment letter, bank statements covering three to six months, a previous rental reference or equivalent, and personal references. For new migrants without Australian rental history, an employer reference letter, an overseas rental reference translated into English, and a cover letter explaining your circumstances can substitute for some of the missing local documentation.

What happens to my bond if there is a dispute with the landlord?

Your bond is held by an independent government bond authority, not your landlord. If your landlord makes a claim against your bond at the end of the tenancy and you dispute it, you can apply to the relevant state tribunal for resolution. NCAT in New South Wales, VCAT in Victoria, QCAT in Queensland, and SACAT in South Australia all handle bond disputes. The process is free or low cost and does not require a lawyer. The bond authority holds the funds until the dispute is resolved.

Is it hard to rent in Australia as a new migrant?

It is harder than it is for applicants with an established Australian rental history, payslips, and local references. The system runs on Australian evidence, and new migrants structurally lack it. The most effective approaches are building as much substitute documentation as possible before applying, starting with transitional accommodation that generates a local rental reference, connecting with community networks that can provide local references or short-term accommodation, and understanding that the first rental is often a tactical step rather than a permanent home. The second application is consistently easier than the first.

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If something in this article stayed with you, you’ve only seen one layer. There are others, quieter and more consistent in how they shape what you notice and how you respond. Most of it is never explained, only repeated until it feels normal. The surface was never the point. The real question is whether you stop here, or begin seeing what has been shaping everything else all along.

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