
Tough love: Noosa may have found the way to beat the rental crisis
It may be too early to tell for sure but Noosa’s crack down on Airbnb may have had a dramatic impact on rental vacancies.
It may be too early to tell for sure but Noosa’s crack down on Airbnb may have had a dramatic impact on rental vacancies.
Young Australians were increasingly opting to “rentvest” and look for compromises in order to get on the property ladder, according to a study.
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The party is finally over for Airbnb after the company decided to permanently ban parties in properties on its platform.
About 200,000 properties in Queensland were either vacant or used for short-term letting and could be used to solve a housing crisis caused by the recent floods.
Residential housing rents in Central Queensland and on the Gold and Sunshine Coasts have increased as much as 15 per cent in the past year, leading to increases in housing stress and potential homelessness, according to CoreLogic.