Rental Yield and Vacancy Stress Testing: 2026 Evidence Report

A current Australian report on gross yield, net yield, vacancy, rent inflation, asking rents, investor debt cost, operating expenses, insurance, tax treatment, and cash-flow stress testing.

Guides

Risk · 24 June 2026 · 8 min read

Reviewed against source material on 24 June 2026.

Jurisdiction
Australia
Review date
24 June 2026
Document type
Evidence report, not advice
Source posture
Current checked sources only

Abstract

This report reviews rental yield and vacancy stress testing: 2026 evidence report for Australian property investors as at 24 June 2026. It uses ABS May 2026 CPI rent data, SQM Research May 2026 vacancy and asking-rent data, RBA cash-rate and lender-rate tables, ABS lending and building-approval indicators, ATO rental and interest-expense guidance, and Moneysmart property-investment and insurance guidance.

As at 24 June 2026, a defensible rental-yield screen should convert advertised rent into a documented after-cost and after-vacancy cash-flow model. The model should test gross yield, net yield, vacancy, rent evidence quality, interest cost, tax treatment, insurance, repairs, strata or body corporate costs, land tax where relevant, and an exit case.

Simple explanation

Gross yield is the first number, not the answer. A useful rental model subtracts vacancy, operating costs, interest, tax timing, repairs, insurance, and a no-tenant case.

Figures

Figure 1 ABS rent inflation, selected months Rent inflation has eased from the 2023 and 2024 peak, but it remains a current input for rent assumptions.
4%4.5%5%5.5%6%6.5%7%7.5%Jul 2023Oct 2023Jan 2024Apr 2024Jul 2024Oct 2024Jan 2025Apr 2025Jul 2025Oct 2025Jan 2026May 2026
Annual movement in ABS rents, selected months from July 2023 to May 2026, percent.

ABS Consumer Price Index, checked 24 June 2026

Figure 2 RBA cash-rate target, selected decisions The selected RBA entries show why debt stress should be modelled directly in 2026.
3.6%3.7%3.8%3.9%4%4.1%4.2%4.3%Feb 2025May 2025Aug 2025Dec 2025Feb 2026Mar 2026May 2026Jun 2026
Selected RBA target cash-rate entries from February 2025 to June 2026. This is not a forecast.

RBA Cash Rate Target, checked 24 June 2026

Figure 3 SQM vacancy rates, May 2026 Vacancy rates remain below 2% across all capital cities in SQM data, so a rent model should use suburb evidence rather than a national average only.

Residential vacancy rate by market, percent, May 2026.

Figure 4 SQM asking-rent growth, May 2026 Asking rents are not the same as signed rents, but they are useful for current market pressure and suburb comparison.

Combined advertised rent annual growth, percent, week ending 12 June 2026.

Figure 5 RBA investor lending rates, April 2026 A yield test should compare rent against the actual debt cost, not against gross rent alone.

Selected RBA housing lending rates, percent per annum, April 2026.

Figure 6 Illustrative rental-yield bridge This simple bridge shows why gross rent should be turned into an after-cost and after-vacancy case.

Illustrative scoring only. Replace with property-specific numbers before action.

Figure 7 ABS dwelling approvals, April 2026 Supply checks should separate houses from higher-density approvals.

Seasonally adjusted dwelling approvals in April 2026.

Figure 8 ABS dwelling lending, March Quarter 2026 The latest checked ABS lending release shows the scale of owner occupier and investor commitments.

Number of new loan commitments for dwellings in March Quarter 2026.

1. Scope and Method

This section explains the source base and the limits of the report.

This report is limited to Australian property, lending, tax, and retirement planning material checked on 24 June 2026. It states general decision rules only. It does not calculate a personal advice outcome.

Official and public sources are used for rule statements and current data. Reddit, forums, and search themes are used only to identify common questions. They are not used as proof of law, tax treatment, or market fact.

References: [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12]

Evidence typeUse in this reportLimitRefs
Official guidanceABS May 2026 CPI rent data, SQM Research May 2026 vacancy and asking-rent data, RBA cash-rate and lender-rate tables, ABS lending and building-approval indicators, ATO rental and interest-expense guidance, and Moneysmart property-investment and insurance guidanceUsed for rule statements, definitions, and current settings.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12]
Market and statistical dataRBA, ABS, APRA, Services Australia, and state revenue pages are used where relevant.Used as current context, not as a forecast.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12]
Forum and search themesUsed to find common investor questions and confusing terms.Not used as factual authority.
Table 1. Evidence standard. The report separates verified source facts from question discovery and illustrative modelling.

2. Evidence Snapshot

As at 24 June 2026, a defensible rental-yield screen should convert advertised rent into a documented after-cost and after-vacancy cash-flow model. The model should test gross yield, net yield, vacancy, rent evidence quality, interest cost, tax treatment, insurance, repairs, strata or body corporate costs, land tax where relevant, and an exit case.

The evidence is read conservatively. A claim is included only when it can be linked to a checked source or is clearly labelled as an illustrative modelling step.

References: [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12]

TopicChecked positionModel actionRefs
Rent inflation contextABS reported rental prices rose 3.6% in the 12 months to May 2026, up from 3.5% in April 2026, and stated that rental inflation continued to reflect sustained low vacancy rates in most capital cities.Use current rent inflation as context only. Confirm the subject property rent from lease evidence, rent ledger, and comparable listings.[1]
Low vacancy contextSQM reported the national residential vacancy rate at 1.2% in May 2026, with 37,844 vacancies, and all capital-city vacancy rates below 2%.Stress vacancy explicitly even in tight markets, because low vacancy does not remove tenant, arrears, repair, or reletting risk.[2]
City vacancy spreadSQM May 2026 vacancy rates ranged from 0.3% in Darwin to 1.6% in Melbourne and Canberra.Do not use the national vacancy rate as the suburb number. Use suburb, property type, and seasonality evidence.[2]
Asking-rent pressureSQM reported national combined asking rents at $700.04 per week and 7.8% higher over 12 months for the week ending 12 June 2026.Use asking-rent data as a market signal, not as proof that the property will achieve that rent.[2]
ABS versus asking-rent dataABS CPI rents and SQM advertised rents measure different things. ABS reported rent inflation of 3.6% over 12 months to May 2026, while SQM reported national asking rents 7.8% higher over 12 months.Keep signed-rent inflation, asking-rent pressure, and subject-property rent evidence as separate rows.[1][2]
Investor debt costRBA April 2026 lender-rate data reported 6.15% for new investment housing loans, 6.09% for new investment principal and interest loans, and 6.23% for new investment interest-only loans.Compare gross rental yield with actual loan rate, repayment type, and interest-only expiry before ranking the property.[4][11]
Cash-rate settingThe RBA cash-rate target was 4.35% on 17 June 2026, unchanged from May 2026 after increases in February, March, and May 2026.Run current-rate, higher-rate, and refinance-unavailable cases instead of assuming rate relief.[3]
Operating-cost listMoneysmart lists ongoing investment-property costs including council and water rates, building insurance, landlord insurance, body corporate fees, land tax, property management fees, repairs, and maintenance.Build net yield from a full cost ledger, not from rent minus interest only.[9]
Vacancy cash burdenMoneysmart says there may be times when the investor has to cover costs if there is no tenant, and says not to rely on rental income to cover the mortgage.Carry a no-tenant cash buffer and show how long the owner can pay all costs without rent.[9]
Tax timingMoneysmart notes that tax deductions may be available, but expenses still have to be paid upfront. ATO guidance separates deductible rental expenses, apportionment, and non-claimable or differently timed items.Separate cash flow from tax timing. Do not present a deduction as immediate cash recovery.[9][7]
Commercial availabilityATO rental-expense guidance uses days held to produce income when the property is unoccupied but available for rent on commercial terms.Record vacancy days, advertising evidence, agent notes, and commercial rent assumptions.[7]
Below-market rentATO guidance says expenses may need to be apportioned if rent is charged below market rates, and that evidence may be needed to show how market rent was calculated.Flag family, related-party, discounted, or non-commercial rent before using full deductions or market yield.[7]
Loan-purpose and interestATO interest guidance says interest deductions depend on the loan principal being used for rental-property purposes, with private-purpose portions separated and apportioned.Trace loan purpose before treating interest as deductible or before calculating after-tax cash flow.[8]
Insurance and underinsuranceMoneysmart home-insurance guidance says to compare what is and is not covered and suggests using contents and building calculators to estimate cover needs.Treat insurance as a stress input and check flood, storm, fire, landlord, excess, and exclusion terms.[10]
Supply contextABS reported April 2026 dwelling approvals of 16,710 seasonally adjusted, with total approvals down 3.4% for the month and private dwellings excluding houses down 3.6%.Use approvals as supply context only. Do not treat approvals as completed rental stock.[6]
Investor lending contextABS reported 57,342 new investor dwelling-loan commitments in March Quarter 2026, down 5.3% over the quarter.Use investor lending as market context, not as evidence that any single property passes serviceability or cash flow.[5]
Table 2. Checked positions. Each row turns a source point into a modelling action.

4. Stress Tests

A useful report shows what can go wrong before it recommends a next step.

The stress tests below are deliberately simple. They are designed to stop a single attractive number, such as a low rate, tax deduction, or high rent estimate, from carrying the whole decision.

Stress testQuestion answeredConservative actionRefs
One-month vacancyWhat happens if the property produces no rent for one month, plus reletting and advertising costs?Reduce annual rent by one month and add reletting cost before debt service.[9]
Two-month vacancyCan the owner cover mortgage, rates, insurance, strata, management, and utilities for two months with no rent?Carry a two-month vacancy case for liquidity, even if the base case uses less.[9]
Rent cut caseDoes the model survive if achievable rent is below the appraisal or the property needs a rent reduction after listing?Run base rent, 5% lower rent, and 10% lower rent cases.
Advertised-rent mismatchIs the rent assumption based on asking rent, signed lease evidence, or agent appraisal?Downgrade confidence unless there is recent signed-rent or leased-comparable evidence.[2]
Operating-cost undercountHave council rates, water, insurance, landlord insurance, strata, land tax, management, repairs, and maintenance been included?Reject the model as incomplete if any ongoing cost line is blank without a reason.[9]
Insurance premium shockDoes the property still pass if building, landlord, flood, storm, or fire insurance increases or exclusions change?Run current premium, higher-premium, and higher-excess cases.[10]
Repair shockDoes a large repair before lease renewal turn a positive yield into negative cash flow?Add an annual repair reserve and a one-off major repair case.[7][9]
Strata levy shockCan the property survive ordinary levy increases or a special levy?For strata property, include levy history, minutes, defects, insurance, and capital works plan.[9]
Interest-rate shockDoes cash flow survive if the actual investor rate is higher than the current quote or if rates remain elevated?Run current rate, plus 1 percentage point, and plus 2 percentage point cases.[3][4]
Interest-only expiryDoes the model survive the move from interest-only to principal and interest repayments?Show repayments before and after interest-only expiry and include refinance risk.[11][4]
Below-market rentIs the rent discounted for a related party, family member, long-term tenant, or non-commercial arrangement?Use actual rent for cash flow and treat market rent as a scenario only unless supported by evidence.[7]
Private-use apportionmentIs any period used privately, blocked from rent, used as a holiday home, or not available on commercial terms?Apportion expense assumptions before showing after-tax yield or deductible interest.[7]
Loan-purpose mixingHas any loan redraw, refinance, offset transfer, or top-up introduced private-purpose debt?Trace each loan split before calculating deductible interest or after-tax cash flow.[8]
Tax refund timingDoes the owner have enough cash to pay costs upfront before any tax outcome?Show pre-tax cash flow, tax timing, and after-tax cash flow as separate outputs.[9][7]
Vacancy seasonalityCould the suburb have seasonal vacancy patterns, student-calendar effects, holiday-market rotation, or weather-driven demand?Use monthly vacancy and listing evidence where available, not only annual averages.[2]
Exit and sale costIf cash flow fails, what sale costs, vacancy, agent costs, CGT, and refinance limits apply?Add an exit case before acquisition, especially where the base yield is thin.[9]
Table 4. Stress-test checklist. Run these tests before relying on the base case.

5. Portfolio Workflow

The workflow keeps tax, debt, cash flow, and exit risk in the same file.

The same workflow should be repeated before acquisition, refinance, renovation, sale, or retirement planning. This keeps the report predictable across the full portfolio.

StepDo thisEvidence to keepRefs
Rent evidence packCollect current lease, rent ledger, arrears report, agent appraisal, comparable leased properties, and current listings.Label each rent number as signed, advertised, appraised, or assumed.[2][7]
Yield definitionsGross yield, net yield, pre-tax cash flow, after-tax cash flow, and cash-on-cash return answer different questions.Put each metric in a separate row and do not let gross yield drive the decision.
Vacancy modelUse local vacancy, city vacancy, one-month vacancy, two-month vacancy, reletting cost, and days-to-lease assumptions.Store the source date and do not reuse stale vacancy evidence.[2]
Operating-cost ledgerList rates, water, insurance, landlord insurance, strata, land tax, management fees, letting fees, repairs, maintenance, utilities, and compliance costs.Require an invoice, quote, contract, levy notice, or conservative placeholder.[9]
Debt-cost ledgerRecord loan balance, limit, rate, repayment type, interest-only expiry, offset balance, redraw, and refinance assumptions.Compare rent cover against actual repayment and stressed repayment.[4][11]
Tax-classification fileSeparate immediate deductions, interest, borrowing costs, capital works, depreciating assets, private-use apportionment, and non-claimable items.Keep accountant notes and ATO source links beside the model.[7][8]
Insurance reviewCheck what is and is not covered, building sum insured, contents if relevant, landlord cover, excess, exclusions, flood, fire, and storm.Use the premium as a recurring cost and the excess as a stress-test cash call.[10]
Strata and defects reviewFor attached dwellings, read minutes, levy notices, insurance, capital works fund, defects, special levy risk, and by-laws.Do not compare apartment yield with house yield without a strata-risk row.[9]
Supply and demand fileRecord building approvals, local pipeline, competing rentals, major employers, universities, transport, and suburb-specific vacancy.Use supply evidence to set questions, not to forecast rent growth with certainty.[6][2]
Rent-review calendarRecord lease start, lease expiry, rent-review rules, notice period, local comparable evidence, and tenant communication.Use a dated calendar so the model does not assume rent can rise whenever costs rise.
Liquidity bufferShow cash needed for vacancy, arrears, insurance excess, urgent repair, interest-rate shock, and tenant turnover.Convert every stress case into a dollar reserve requirement.[9][10]
Decision recordDocument accepted case, rejected case, missing evidence, sensitivity range, adviser questions, and next review date.Keep the record with source dates so future updates can replace assumptions cleanly.
Table 5. Practical workflow. The rows are written as actions so the report can be turned into a model checklist.

6. Limits and Claim Map

The report supports analysis, not personal financial, tax, legal, or credit advice.

The safest reading is cautious. Use this report to structure questions, identify missing evidence, and prepare adviser conversations. Do not treat it as an approval, forecast, valuation, or tax ruling.

References: [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12]

ClaimEvidence usedStatusRefs
Gross yield is an incomplete decision metric.Moneysmart lists major costs and vacancy risk, while ATO guidance requires correct expense treatment and apportionment.Supported as a modelling caution.[9][7]
Vacancy must be modelled even when market vacancy is low.SQM reports tight vacancy rates, but Moneysmart still warns investors may need to cover costs when there is no tenant.Supported. Low vacancy is not zero vacancy.[2][9]
ABS rent inflation and advertised asking rent are not interchangeable.ABS CPI rent inflation and SQM advertised-rent growth are different datasets with different current readings.Supported. Each chart must name its data source.[1][2]
Debt cost can dominate rent growth.RBA investor lending rates in April 2026 sit around 6% for new investor loans, while gross yield ignores operating costs and vacancy.Supported. Compare rent with actual repayments and stressed repayments.[4]
After-tax yield is not the same as cash flow.Moneysmart notes expenses must be paid upfront even if deductions may be available, and ATO guidance separates expense treatment.Supported. Show pre-tax cash first.[9][7]
Loan-purpose evidence affects interest treatment.ATO interest guidance requires private-purpose portions to be separated and apportioned.Supported. Loan splits and records are needed.[8]
Insurance belongs in yield stress testing.Moneysmart investment-property guidance lists building and landlord insurance, and home-insurance guidance advises checking cover and using calculators.Supported. Premiums, excesses, and exclusions should be modelled.[9][10]
Supply data should be used cautiously.ABS building approvals describe approvals, not completed homes or leased rental supply.Supported. Use approvals as context only.[6]
A high-yield property can still fail.The checked sources identify vacancy, costs, debt, tax timing, insurance, repairs, and liquidity risk.Supported as a risk conclusion, not a forecast.[2][4][7][9]
Reddit and forums are useful for finding user language.Forum themes were used to identify questions about 5% yield, low-yield apartments, vacancy assumptions, net returns, and whether rent covers current interest rates.Supported by method. Official and public data sources carry factual claims.
The page is not personal investment, credit, tax, or legal advice.The report uses general public sources and does not include a lender approval, tenancy-law review, valuation, insurance quote, tax ruling, or complete borrower file.Supported. Replace assumptions with property-specific documents before action.
Table 6. Claim and evidence map. Major claims are mapped to evidence so weak claims stay visible.

References

  1. [1] ABS: Consumer Price Index, May 2026 Checked 24 June 2026
  2. [2] SQM Research: National Vacancy Rate, May 2026 Checked 24 June 2026
  3. [3] RBA: Cash Rate Target Checked 24 June 2026
  4. [4] RBA: Lenders Interest Rates Checked 24 June 2026
  5. [5] ABS: Lending Indicators, March Quarter 2026 Checked 24 June 2026
  6. [6] ABS: Building Approvals, April 2026 Checked 24 June 2026
  7. [7] ATO: How to claim rental expenses Checked 24 June 2026
  8. [8] ATO: Interest expenses Checked 24 June 2026
  9. [9] Moneysmart: Buying an investment property Checked 24 June 2026
  10. [10] Moneysmart: Home insurance Checked 24 June 2026
  11. [11] Moneysmart: Interest-only home loans Checked 24 June 2026
  12. [12] Moneysmart: Choosing a home loan Checked 24 June 2026

Land Tax for Australian Property Investors: 2026 Report

A current, sourced report on Australian land tax, thresholds, ownership dates, exemptions, foreign and absentee surcharges, settlement timing, and portfolio cash-flow modelling.

Read report

Interest-Only Loans for Property Investors: 2026 Evidence Report

A current Australian report on interest-only investment loans, repayment cliffs, serviceability, investor rates, DTI guardrails, rental-income haircuts, tax-purpose tracing, refinancing, and exit planning.

Read report

Apartment Investing and Body Corporate Risk: 2026 Report

A sourced 2026 report on apartment investing, strata and body corporate records, levies, special levies, defects, cladding, insurance, supply, rent, debt, and resale risk.

Read report

Insurance and Climate Risk for Property Investors: 2026 Report

A sourced report on home and landlord insurance, natural hazard cover, underinsurance, premium stress, vacancy, claims, and climate-risk due diligence for Australian property investors.

Read report