
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


A storm is brewing in the New South Wales rental market as the state government prepares to roll out its ban on "no grounds evictions" for landlords. This controversial reform will fundamentally alter the relationship between property owners and tenants, requiring landlords to provide legitimate reasons before asking renters to vacate.
The legislation, slated for full implementation by May 19th, follows earlier reforms capping rent increases to once yearly and prohibiting rental bidding. Under current rules, landlords can give tenants 90 days notice without specifying a reason once agreements become periodic. The new system requires valid grounds such as property sales, owner occupation, or family member housing needs. Landlords providing false pretexts face severe consequences – potential $14,000 fines or mandatory three-month vacancy periods that could cost thousands in lost rental income.
What's particularly striking about these changes is the questionable net benefit for those they're ostensibly designed to help. Despite multiple tenant-focused reforms in recent years, the rental market remains brutally competitive. Property managers report unprecedented inventory shortages – areas that typically maintained 35-55 available rentals now struggle with just 4-8 listings. Rents continue climbing, and finding affordable housing grows increasingly difficult. Meanwhile, property owners face mounting regulatory burdens that make professional management almost essential, as navigating the complex legal landscape becomes too risky for self-management. Are these reforms genuinely addressing housing affordability, or simply winning political points while leaving fundamental supply issues unresolved? We'd love to hear your thoughts on these changes – share your experience as a landlord, tenant or property professional!
By Mark Novak, Lisa Novak, Billy Drury, Michael Burgio, Cleo Whithear, Stankovic, Stevan Bubalo, Bidhan Shrestha, Thomas Sims, Jonathan Vescio, Harry Lorcas, Josh Wapshott and guests5
11 ratings
A storm is brewing in the New South Wales rental market as the state government prepares to roll out its ban on "no grounds evictions" for landlords. This controversial reform will fundamentally alter the relationship between property owners and tenants, requiring landlords to provide legitimate reasons before asking renters to vacate.
The legislation, slated for full implementation by May 19th, follows earlier reforms capping rent increases to once yearly and prohibiting rental bidding. Under current rules, landlords can give tenants 90 days notice without specifying a reason once agreements become periodic. The new system requires valid grounds such as property sales, owner occupation, or family member housing needs. Landlords providing false pretexts face severe consequences – potential $14,000 fines or mandatory three-month vacancy periods that could cost thousands in lost rental income.
What's particularly striking about these changes is the questionable net benefit for those they're ostensibly designed to help. Despite multiple tenant-focused reforms in recent years, the rental market remains brutally competitive. Property managers report unprecedented inventory shortages – areas that typically maintained 35-55 available rentals now struggle with just 4-8 listings. Rents continue climbing, and finding affordable housing grows increasingly difficult. Meanwhile, property owners face mounting regulatory burdens that make professional management almost essential, as navigating the complex legal landscape becomes too risky for self-management. Are these reforms genuinely addressing housing affordability, or simply winning political points while leaving fundamental supply issues unresolved? We'd love to hear your thoughts on these changes – share your experience as a landlord, tenant or property professional!

16,832 Listeners

8 Listeners

11 Listeners

2,632 Listeners

12 Listeners

1 Listeners

18 Listeners

19 Listeners

0 Listeners