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How Much Rent Is Too Much? The 30% Rule in Practice

Canberra renters are blowing past the long-accepted affordability threshold, and the gap between renting and buying has never been harder to close.

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By Canberra Property Desk · Published 4 July 2026, 7:53 am

4 min read

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This article was generated by AI from the linked public sources. The Daily Canberra is independently owned and covers Canberra news free from advertiser or sponsor influence. Read our editorial standards →

How Much Rent Is Too Much? The 30% Rule in Practice
Photo: Photo by Ivan S on Pexels

More than half of Canberra's private renters are now spending above 30 percent of their gross income on housing costs, according to ACT Housing data compiled through the March 2026 quarter. That figure — the threshold economists and housing advocates have used for decades to define rental stress — is no longer an edge case in this city. It is the median experience.

The timing matters. The Reserve Bank's two rate cuts since November 2025 were supposed to ease pressure on both sides of the rent-versus-buy ledger. For many Canberra households, they haven't. Rents have kept climbing as vacancy rates sit stubbornly below one percent across the inner north and inner south, while the ACT median house price of approximately $835,000 means a standard 20 percent deposit now requires parking $167,000 in savings before a buyer even approaches a lender.

What the 30% Rule Actually Means Here

The rule itself is straightforward: keep housing costs — rent or mortgage — below 30 percent of gross household income, and you're considered financially stable. Breach it, and you're in stress territory, meaning less capacity for food, transport, healthcare and savings. The concept dates to U.S. housing policy in the 1960s and was adopted by Australian housing researchers in the 1980s. It has been criticised as blunt, but no better single benchmark has replaced it.

Run the numbers for Canberra and the picture is uncomfortable. The ACT's average full-time adult weekly earnings sit around $2,050 according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics November 2025 figures, which translates to a gross annual income of roughly $106,600. Thirty percent of that monthly works out to about $2,665. The median asking rent for a three-bedroom house in suburbs like Belconnen and Gungahlin — two of the territory's main growth corridors — is currently tracking between $680 and $720 per week, or $2,944 to $3,120 monthly. That's already past the threshold for an average single-income household, before utilities or body corporate fees enter the picture.

Dual-income households fare better on paper, but the ACT Council of Social Service has consistently pointed out that a significant share of Canberra renters are single adults, sole parents or people working part-time in hospitality and retail. The Northbourne Avenue corridor, which runs from the city through Dickson into Lyneham, has seen a cluster of new apartment completions over the past 18 months, yet even one-bedroom rents in those buildings are regularly listed above $450 per week.

The Buy Side Isn't the Easy Exit It Looks Like

For those running the numbers on whether buying beats renting, the calculation is genuinely close — and in some cases, still favours renting. A $835,000 mortgage at a current variable rate of around 5.9 percent over 30 years produces monthly repayments of roughly $4,960 on a 100 percent loan. Factor in a 20 percent deposit and that drops to about $3,970 per month — still well above what most renters pay, and that's before rates, insurance, maintenance and Canberra's land tax regime for investors, which can add hundreds of dollars monthly to the cost of owning an investment property.

The ACT Shared Equity Scheme, which allows eligible buyers to co-purchase with the territory government and reduce their loan size, has helped some households bridge the gap. The scheme is capped, however, and demand consistently outstrips available places. The Suburban Land Agency's land release program in Molonglo Valley has also added some supply, though settlement delays have pushed several projects into 2027.

What practical steps can renters actually take? Housing advocates suggest three immediate moves: request a formal rental ledger from your property manager to benchmark what you're paying against median rents in your suburb; check eligibility for the ACT government's Rental Assistance Rebate, which remained open for applications as of June 30; and if you're within two to three years of a potential purchase, engage a mortgage broker now rather than waiting, because pre-approval processes have lengthened as lenders tighten serviceability assessments. The 30 percent rule won't fix the market, but knowing exactly where you stand against it is the first honest calculation worth making.

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Published by The Daily Canberra

Covering property in Canberra. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources and was not reviewed by a human editor before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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