frequently asked question

Why did rental prices go up during COVID?

As the RBA highlighted, the pandemic fundamentally changed the type of housing we sought after:

During the COVID-19 pandemic, lockdowns and health concerns meant that people desired more space and to live with fewer people. This shift in living preferences contributed to average household size declining to its lowest level in at least a quarter of a century. 

The decline in average household size since the start of 2020 – around 1 per cent – is estimated to have contributed to around 120,000 additional households being formed and, as a result, additional demand in the rental market. Average household size has remained low in the face of the recent tightness in the rental market and rising rents. Solid growth in incomes (and, for some, increased working from home [WFH]) has underpinned demand for space.

What this suggests is that one of the drivers of increased housing demand during COVID-19 was the decline in household size, due to factors such as the rise of work-from-home arrangements and the desire for more space per person inside the home due to various lockdown restrictions. 

After the lockdowns ended and interstate and international migration to our cities restarted, the smaller average household size meant there was not enough capacity to accommodate the same number of households as pre-COVID.

Furthermore, the sudden rent rises after the initial decline can be explained more simply. When people left prices fell and people consumed more housing. When people returned, we couldn't simply return to the way things were. It takes time for leases to be renewed etc. As a result, there was a flood of new people trying to get access to a very small number of newly advertised properties. In those conditions, advertised rents will inevitably rise. 

Some imply that advertised rents magically went up when lockdowns ended, when in reality they went up because a flood of new people returning to Melbourne caused demand for new rentals to outstrip supply. 

The COVID-19-induced rental crisis is not evidence against supply shortages being an issue, but in fact, is further evidence that supply is at the core of housing affordability.

Your hottest YIMBY Queries, Answered

Frequently Asked Questions

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Are YIMBYs aligned with any political parties?
Aren't Melbourne apartments low-quality? Why do you want more of them?
Aren't tax concessions the biggest cause of the housing crisis? Why focus on zoning and planning?
Can't we just keep building greenfield/outer suburban developments?
Can't we just stop foreign investment to combat the housing crisis?
Can't we just stop immigration to solve the housing crisis?
Do you support stronger renter protections?
Doesn't new development just push poor people out of the city?
Don't high permit approval rates show that planning isn't the issue?
How does market-rate housing supply benefit those most in need?
Isn't zoning and planning reform just a giveaway to developers?
Local councillors are democratically elected representatives. What’s wrong with them having final decision-making powers over planning matters?
Loosening planning controls may result in more ugly modern buildings. Shouldn't new buildings be beautiful?
Shouldn't the local community get the final say on what happens in their "backyard"?
There are already so many apartments. Do we need more?
What about parking? Won't new developments create massive congestion in our cities?
What about those one million vacant homes?
What can we do about land banking?
What if I don’t want to live in an apartment?
What's the problem with building setbacks?
Why build denser cities? Isn't it better to decentralise?
Why can't the government just build public housing for all?
Why did rental prices go up during COVID?
Why do you hold councils accountable for housing supply delivery?
Why does YIMBY Melbourne have such a problem with heritage overlays?
Why doesn't YIMBY Melbourne endorse mandatory inclusionary zoning?