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Housing News Digest

The Tenants' Union Housing News Digest compiles our pick of items from all the latest tenancy and housing media, sent once per week, on Thursdays. 

Below is the Digest archive from November 2020 onwards. From time to time you will find additional items in the archive that did not make it into the weekly Digest email. Earlier archives are here, where you can also find additional digests by other organisations. 

Our main email newsletter, Tenant News is sent once every two months. You can subscribe or update your subscription preferences for any of our email newsletters here.

See notes about the Digest and a list of other contributors here. Many thanks to those contributors for sharing links with us.

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Archive

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Key topics

Stressed, scared, overwhelmed: the election issues weighing on young Australian voters

Rafqa Touma and Ima Caldwell
The Guardian (No paywall)

“There is a general sense – it sounds melodramatic – of, well, the world is ending, we have no way to deal with that, so we are just going to get on with life,” Axel says. The 25-year-old is describing a feeling shared by his friends in their mid-20s. “I know that I need to prepare for the future but also it doesn’t feel like there is much of a point … when we don’t know what the impact of climate change is going to be in five years’ time, let alone 10; we don’t know if the wealth gap is going to keep getting deeper, if I am ever going to be anything more than very stressed working class. “Why wouldn’t I just spend my time doing things I love with people I love?”

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/apr/09/australia…

# Must read Australia, .
 

The Brisbane nanny: ‘I had my rent under control, but now they are raising it’

Joe Hinchliffe
The Guardian (No paywall)

Holli Brunckhorst’s rent is about to go up again. The 23-year-old nanny believes her budget can probably absorb another rise. Brunckhorst is quite certain, however, that her studio apartment in Windsor, above a six-lane highway that runs like a spine down the seat of Brisbane, is not worth what she will soon be paying for it. The roar of the road resounds through her apartment block’s communal balcony, which looks south towards the city’s towers, beyond the service station below and past a tangle of toll roads and busways.

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/apr/10/the-brisb…

# Must read Australia, Rent.
 

Queensland Rail transforms old crew quarters into affordable housing


7 News ()

Queensland Rail is transforming its old crew quarters into affordable housing for vulnerable women. The initiative aims to address the growing issue of homelessness, particularly among women over 55, who are at a higher risk of homelessness, especially those fleeing domestic violence. The first site is set to open by Christmas.

https://7news.com.au/news/queensland-rail-transforms-old-crew-qu…

# Hot topic Australia, Domestic violence.
 

Thousands in Spain join nationwide march to protest against housing crisis

Stephen Burgen
The Guardian (No paywall)

Tens of thousands of people have taken to the streets of Spain in the latest protest against housing speculation and to demand access to affordable homes. Organisers claim that up to 150,000 joined the protest in Madrid while smaller demonstrations were held in about 40 cities across the country. Protesters from Málaga on the Costa del Sol to Vigo in the Atlantic northwest chanted “end the housing racket” and “landlords are guilty, the government is responsible”. Valeria Racu, a spokesperson for the Madrid tenants’ union, called for rent strikes such as those mounted recently in some Catalan coastal towns.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/apr/05/spain-protest-marc…

# Must read International, Rent.
 

And the award for zero self-awareness goes to second-home owners raging about higher taxes

Gaby Hinsliff
The Guardian (No paywall)

Should you have the world’s tiniest violin to hand, prepare to play it. This week, English councils gain the power to double council tax on second homes, and the holiday-cottage-owning classes are fuming. “Nothing but a racket,” thundered the Daily Telegraph, dismissing a supposedly “vindictive” raid on weekenders that was (gasp) “socialist” to boot. Its Sunday sister paper further tugged on readers’ heartstrings with tales of homeowners who had inherited a second place somewhere lovely from their parents, and bridled at being asked to pay a few thousand pounds more a year to keep it in the family. In the Times, a retired barrister who felt forced to give up the seaside pad she had bought in her mother’s native St Davids complained of the tax “destroying generations of community-building”, as though houses sitting empty all winter were the one thing really guaranteed to bring a thriving community together. To which one can only say: people, learn to read a room(s). You’ve certainly got enough of them.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/apr/01/zero-self-…

# Must read International, .
 

World's weirdest rental rules: From 'Moving Day' to homes without kitchens

Paul Ewart
realestate.com.au (No paywall)

Think Australian rental agreements are tough? Think again. While Australian renters might feel constrained by short leases and high rents, the global rental landscape is a wild and wonderful tapestry of quirks, customs, and downright bizarre practices. “Many international tenants are surprised by how different the Australian rental market is from what they’re used to when they arrive here,” said Damien Lake, a Sydney-based residential property manager who frequently works with overseas professionals relocating overseas for work.

https://www.realestate.com.au/news/worlds-weirdest-rental-rules-…

# Hot topic International, Rent, Starting a tenancy.
 

The tenancies that have lasted 20 years

Susan Edmunds
Radio NZ (No paywall)

Wellington woman Carla has been renting her Ngaio property for 20 years. She had just moved to New Zealand when she found it, while searching for a temporary place to live. "It was either the second or third place we viewed. We liked the house, easy train access, the local library and playgrounds. We didn't have a car. We said we wanted it, and got it… it sounds like a fairy tale." Over the time she's been renting, her rent hasn't lifted a lot. "I fully acknowledge that we are ridiculously lucky in this. But I worked very hard to be a good tenant. We have a good trust between us at this point.

https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/556995/the-tenancies-that-ha…

# Hot topic International, Rent, Repairs.
 

‘Completely disproportionate’: UK tenants feel the bite of ‘pet rent’

Mabel Banfield-Nwachi
The Guardian (No paywall)

Katie Fisher’s bid for her rental flat in south-east London was initially rejected because she had a dog. When she offered to pay an additional £50 a month in rent, taking the cost of the two-bedroom flat to £1,450 a month, the landlord agreed. The practice of paying an extra fee each month in order to live with a furry companion – sometimes referred to as “pet rent” – is a common arrangement in privately rented properties.

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/apr/06/completely-dispr…

# Must read International, Rent.
 

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