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We Need To Increase Commonwealth Rent Assistance (Read 119 times)
whiteknight
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We Need To Increase Commonwealth Rent Assistance
Today at 3:54am
 
Renters need $300,000 more superannuation in retirement than home owners, report finds

Dec 9 2025
ABC News.

Australians who don't own a home may face greater financial challenges in retirement, a report has found.   Sad

In short:
Rising rents mean older Australians who aren't home owners will need twice as much superannuation to enjoy the same retirement lifestyle as those who are mortgage-free, according to a report.

The research by Super Consumers Australia found a typical single retiree paying rent needs $659,000 in super, compared to $322,000 for a home owner.

What's next?
The advocacy group is calling on the government to urgently increase Commonwealth Rent Assistance in line with rental increases to avoid creating "an impossible challenge" for many retirees.


Older Australians who retire without owning a home will need about double the superannuation of those with a paid-off property if they want to enjoy a comfortable lifestyle, research finds.

Advocacy group Super Consumers Australia has warned renters are "at real risk of retirement disaster" if the federal government fails to act.

The report highlighted the wealth gap, quantifying how much extra those who rent would need in super to match the quality of life of someone who owns their home.

Australia's housing obsession fuels income divide, leaving renters behind

Australia is now a "home owner's welfare state", leading economists argue, and if the tax treatment of housing were reformed, the nation as a whole would benefit.

The research calculated that a typical single retiree who rents requires $659,000 in super to ensure a financially secure future, compared to $322,000 for a retiree who occupies their own mortgage-free property.

A couple renting would need a combined $786,000 in super, compared to $432,000 for couples who are home owners.

"Every day this isn't addressed, renters face an impossible financial challenge in retirement … we've got a crisis facing retirees right now," Super Consumers Australia CEO Xavier O'Halloran said.

"Renters are at a real risk of retirement disaster if the government doesn't act.

"Long-term solutions need to focus on getting more people into affordable housing."

Super Consumer Australia, which produced the 2026 Retirement Savings Targets for Renters report, is a not-for-profit organisation that advocates for low-and-middle income Australians in the super system.


People in their 60s are not always given jobs but. instead, are offered help they don't want, the ageism survey finds.

Financial stress 'three times more likely' for renters
Using data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), the report looked at the spending needs and habits of retirees in the middle range — around the 50th percentile mark — whose lifestyles were comfortable without being extravagant.

It based its housing information on one-bedroom apartments in capital cities for single people, and a mixture of one and two-bedroom units for couples.

It compared what home owners might spend on maintaining their properties each week with the rent paid by those with a lease, alongside daily expenses.

Rate hike could be here within months
A digitally blended composite image comprised of people and the RBA
Hotter-than-expected inflation figures have caught many off guard and open the door for an RBA interest rate hike in 2026.

In June 2025, a standard one-bedroom rental in Sydney cost about $560 a week, with around $470 a week paid, on average, in Australia's other capital cities.

Only 10 per cent of retired home owners were in financial stress, compared to almost half of retired renters, the report's author Katrina Ellis said.

"It wasn't a pretty picture and showed that retired renters were more than three times more likely to be in financial stress than home owners," Ms Ellis, the deputy CEO of Super Consumers Australia, told ABC News.

"The only way for renters to have the same quality of life as home owners was to roughly double their amount of super which, of course, is almost impossible."


The report's data, from a broad survey of retirees, was based on their actual spending, using a bundle of goods, as well as the cost-of-living index.

Ms Ellis said that while rents had gone up by an average of 4.5 per cent in 2025, Commonwealth Rent Assistance had increased by only 2 per cent.

"It is alarming that it is just not keeping pace with fast-increasing rents, with rent assistance pegged to the wrong thing," Ms Ellis said.

"Now with about 20 per cent of retirees being renters, they are facing a financial disaster."
'Saving more' no solution for renters
Mr O'Halloran said the federal government needed to urgently focus on getting more people into affordable housing to avoid giving older renters "an impossible financial challenge in retirement".

.
Median rents have increased by almost 50 per cent since 2020, advocacy groups say.

"Telling renters to simply 'save more' isn't the solution to this problem," he said.

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whiteknight
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Re: We Need To Increase Commonwealth Rent Assistance
Reply #1 - Today at 3:58am
 
We're calling on the Minister for Social Services, Tanya Plibersek, to address Rent Assistance as a matter of urgency. Every day this isn't addressed, renters face an impossible financial challenge in retirement."

Cassandra Goldie, CEO of the Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS), said runaway rents were hurting a broad cross-section of society, not just older Australians.   Sad

"Median asking rents have surged about 50 per cent in five years, outpacing wages and leaving renters behind,"  Dr Goldie said.
Buying a home has never been harder


Home prices have risen by almost 50 per cent in the past five years, pushing housing affordability to its worst levels on records, a new report has found.

"This report confirms that surging rents have a major impact on people's financial position throughout all stages of life.

"Our surveys show that people on low incomes are skipping meals, forgoing fruit and vegetables and living in unsafe temperatures to save on energy bills just to keep a roof over their heads in the private rental market."

Dr Goldie urged state and federal governments to cap rent increases, lift income support payments, and boost social housing "to ensure people on low incomes have safe, secure and affordable homes throughout their lives".

A spokesperson from the Department of Social Services told ABC News: "The Australian Government recognises that access to secure and affordable housing has social, economic, and personal benefits for all Australians."

"The maximum rates of Commonwealth Rent Assistance have increased by almost 50 per cent since March 2022 thanks to real increases from government and regular indexation," a spokesperson said in a statement.

Last year's federal budget included $1.9 billion over five years to fund a 10 per cent increase to the maximum rates of the rental assistance payment, but there was no further boost in the 2025-2026 budget.

The dream of enjoying a good standard of living in the so-called golden years — often the reward for decades of toil in the workforce and conscientious saving — is becoming unattainable for a growing number of Australians, Ms Ellis warned.

"Everyone deserves a comfortable retirement, but people who rent are being left behind,"  Ms Ellis said.   Sad
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Carl D
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Re: We Need To Increase Commonwealth Rent Assistance
Reply #2 - Today at 6:18am
 
Problem is, if rent assistance is increased then rents will also increase by the same amount almost immediately.

Greedy real estate agents (worst scumbags on earth in my opinion. All of them).
Greedy landlords.
Greedy governments (most pollies own investment properties).
Greedy people in general.

No wonder housing (buying or renting) is so unaffordable these days.

As someone said just recently - it's time housing was treated as a human right instead of a game of Monopoly.
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Carl D
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Re: We Need To Increase Commonwealth Rent Assistance
Reply #3 - Today at 6:43am
 
Quote:
...and boost social housing "to ensure people on low incomes have safe, secure and affordable homes throughout their lives".


Good luck with that.

Every State and Territory government in Australia has been selling off public housing or pushing it onto social housing providers for a long time now.

And what they still have left is being seriously neglected in regards to maintenance with the ultimate aim of getting rid of it as soon as they can.

Because governments don't want to "do" public housing anymore.

The good old neoliberal approach - let the private sector take care of everything instead of the government.

In the case of private rentals this worked reasonably well untll about 10 years ago when the inevitable greed set in (see my last post for those responsible) and it has now reached the point where there are no private rentals anywhere in Australia that a single person on a Centrelink pension or benefit can afford anymore.

Even a lot of "low income earners" (i.e. casuals) can't afford them.

And this is also why public housing waiting lists are on the increase Australia wide - WA's list now has over 23,000 applications.

That's applications, not people. A single application could be 2, 3 or more people depending on the size of the family applying.

It was about 16,000 applications nine years ago when our current Labor government took office. And, with all of their selling off of public housing since then there are only about 1,000 more homes available for public housing today than there were 9 years ago (they've sold off a LOT more than they've built or bought).

Disgraceful stuff.
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« Last Edit: Today at 9:21am by Carl D »  

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Bobby.
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Re: We Need To Increase Commonwealth Rent Assistance
Reply #4 - Today at 7:44am
 

What is alarming is that I know people who have paid 4 times the old asking price
of a place they started renting a long time ago -
because they couldn't get a bank loan -
and now they don't own even one brick of it.
They could be out on the street with 2 months notice -
and rental places almost impossible to find.

I suppose life is full of injustices?
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John Smith
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Re: We Need To Increase Commonwealth Rent Assistance
Reply #5 - Today at 7:50am
 
How does one go through their whole adult working life and not buy one property? I can understand the ones who due to marriage break up are unable to start again, but the others? To busy holidaying and not willing to sacrifice. Roll Eyes

I had a tenant about ten years ago who when renewing her lease mentioned that they were happy to renew it for another ten years. I asked if she wanted to buy a house? She said no, they had money for a deposit but were content with renting because they didn't need to worry about maintenance. At the time her rent was just under $400/week. They had another 15 odd years before they reached retirement. I asked her what she thought the rent would be in 15 yrs and how was she planning on paying it? They both only worked part time. Then I explained to her that maintenance costs and mortgage would be far less in the long term then what she paid out in rent.

5 months later she broke her lease to buy a property for $350k ... that Property is now worth over $1m and rent for her old property is about $900 week.

She's lucky she had me to advise her.
So is Bobby since i had a similar conversation with him a few years ago when he was renting. Cheesy

Another tenant in the same complex had been in her property for over 12 years, since the place was built. He rental ledger showed she'd paid well over $300k in rent over that 12 yr period. The property when new was selling for $180k. Her landlord loved her. Cheesy Cheesy
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Our esteemed leader:
I hope that bitch who was running their brothels for them gets raped with a cactus.
 
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Bobby.
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Re: We Need To Increase Commonwealth Rent Assistance
Reply #6 - Today at 8:02am
 
Quote:
So is Bobby since i had a similar conversation with him a few years ago when he was renting.


I rented for a few years after I sold my house and during the Covid crisis.
It was convenient while I decided what to do
and didn't tie me down if I had to go interstate for work.
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John Smith
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Re: We Need To Increase Commonwealth Rent Assistance
Reply #7 - Today at 10:07am
 
Bobby. wrote Today at 8:02am:
Quote:
So is Bobby since i had a similar conversation with him a few years ago when he was renting.


I rented for a few years after I sold my house and during the Covid crisis.
It was convenient while I decided what to do
and didn't tie me down if I had to go interstate for work.


Good thing you listened to me for once goober, otherwise you'd still be crying you can't afford your rent Cheesy Cheesy
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Our esteemed leader:
I hope that bitch who was running their brothels for them gets raped with a cactus.
 
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Bobby.
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Re: We Need To Increase Commonwealth Rent Assistance
Reply #8 - Today at 10:15am
 
John Smith wrote Today at 10:07am:
Bobby. wrote Today at 8:02am:
Quote:
So is Bobby since i had a similar conversation with him a few years ago when he was renting.


I rented for a few years after I sold my house and during the Covid crisis.
It was convenient while I decided what to do
and didn't tie me down if I had to go interstate for work.


Good thing you listened to me for once goober, otherwise you'd still be crying you can't afford your rent Cheesy Cheesy



yeah right John,
you're my financial advisor now.   Roll Eyes
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John Smith
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Re: We Need To Increase Commonwealth Rent Assistance
Reply #9 - Today at 10:17am
 
Bobby. wrote Today at 10:15am:
yeah right John,
you're my financial advisor now.   Roll Eyes


You wouldn't cry so much about not getting the dole if I were Cheesy Cheesy
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Our esteemed leader:
I hope that bitch who was running their brothels for them gets raped with a cactus.
 
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Bobby.
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Re: We Need To Increase Commonwealth Rent Assistance
Reply #10 - Today at 10:21am
 
John Smith wrote Today at 10:17am:
Bobby. wrote Today at 10:15am:
yeah right John,
you're my financial advisor now.   Roll Eyes


You wouldn't cry so much about not getting the dole if I were Cheesy Cheesy



Centrelink always got out of paying me even one penny.    Angry
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