Significant changes to residential tenancy laws passed through parliament this week heralding a strengthening of tenants rights as they relate to residential leases. The following key changes will impact residential tenancies:
- Tenants will be allowed to keep pets and the property owner will only be able to refuse in certain circumstances.
- Tenants will be able to make minor modifications to the property without permission from the owner.
- Tenants may take an owner to court if they can demonstrate the owner has acted with reciprocity against a tenant.
- Rent increases are limited to once annually.
- The process of bond disposals can be commenced by either tenant or landlord.
- Disputes will mostly be heard by the Commissioner of Consumer Protection rather than the Magistrate’s Court.
- Rent bidding will be banned.
Overall, the changes are moderate and align with tenancies laws in other states and territories. Importantly, the changes stop short of prohibiting ‘without grounds terminations’, a silly phrase used to describe circumstances where a tenant requests a further lease term after the end of a fixed term and the landlord refuses without giving a reason.
REIWA conducted a survey into this particular element of the tenancy laws with an astonishing 61 percent of the 6,000-odd landlords surveyed saying they’d ‘consider selling’ the property if ‘without grounds terminations’ were prohibited. Given a fixed term lease has a clear end date, neither party should anticipate that an additional lease or reversion to a ‘periodic lease’ is assured. You don’t have to give a reason to end a fixed term agreement in any other circumstance, even a marriage!
At a time where supply of rental homes are at crisis point across Australia, new laws that actively undermine the encouragement of supply risks further disincentivizing the main cohort of property investors; unsophisticated, family investors the majority of whom own one additional property other than their home.
Given family investors provide 9 in every 10 rentals in WA, we cannot afford to discourage them.