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Rising Rents Give Landlords a Fresh Reason to Review Risk

June quarter data points to a more uneven rental market for investors

Rising Rents Give Landlords a Fresh Reason to Review Risk?w=400

The information on this website is general in nature and does not take into account your objectives, financial situation, or needs. Consider seeking personal advice from a licensed adviser before acting on any information.

Domain’s June Quarter 2026 Rent Report has added a new layer to the debate facing Australian landlords: rental growth is accelerating again, but not evenly across the country.
For property investors, the headline is not simply that rents are rising.
It is that local market conditions, tenant affordability and policy uncertainty are now pulling rental markets in different directions.

The sharpest movement came from Sydney houses, where weekly rents rose by $50 over the quarter to reach a record $850. Across the combined capital cities, house rents increased by $20, the strongest quarterly lift in almost two years. Unit rents moved more modestly, rising by $5 across the capitals, which suggests the pressure is increasingly concentrated in detached housing rather than shared evenly across every rental type.

Brisbane also reached a record house rent of $700 a week, while Darwin recorded particularly strong annual growth and moved ahead of Perth as the second most expensive capital city house rental market. By contrast, Melbourne, Perth, Adelaide and Hobart showed softer quarterly momentum, even though vacancy conditions remain tight. That divergence matters for landlords because it challenges the idea of one national rental cycle.

This latest report also extends the recent conversation about tax reform and investor sentiment. Domain’s analysis suggests that expectations around proposed housing investment policy changes may already be influencing rent-setting behaviour in markets where demand is strong enough to support increases. However, affordability is still a hard ceiling. Pushing rents too aggressively can increase the risk of tenant turnover, longer vacancies, disputes or reduced property care.

For landlords, the practical response should be measured rather than reactive. Higher rent may improve cash flow, but it can also alter the risk profile of an investment property. A higher weekly rent can increase the financial impact of arrears, lease breaks or an unplanned vacancy. It may also make loss of rent cover more important, particularly in markets where replacement tenants are sensitive to affordability.

Investors should consider reviewing:

  • whether current insured values reflect rebuild and repair costs;
  • how their policy treats tenant damage, malicious damage and accidental damage;
  • the waiting periods, caps and conditions attached to loss of rent insurance;
  • whether contents supplied with the property are adequately protected;
  • how much vacancy or arrears their cash flow could absorb.

The key lesson is that strong rental demand does not remove landlord risk; it changes the way that risk shows up. In a fragmented market, landlords should compare local rental conditions with their debt costs, tenant profile and suitable cover. Staying close to market updates can also help investors avoid treating national averages as a substitute for suburb-level decisions.

Published:Saturday, 11th Jul 2026
Author: Paige Estritori

Please Note: We do not endorse any specific products or companies. Some content is sourced from third parties, including press releases, and may not be independently verified for accuracy or completeness.

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