‘Your dollar doesn’t go very far anymore’: Australia's pensioners in danger due to rental crisis

Retirement can be riddled with daily financial and other strains.

While seniors may be receiving the aged pension, the costs of food, rent, medical services, and other essentials can eat up a large chunk of your monthly budget.

In some areas of the country, the rental crisis has gotten so bad that pensioners are just an increase in rent away from bankruptcy.



Annemarie King, a 69-year-old resident of South Tamworth, New South Wales, recently received written notice from her real estate agent that she would have to pay an extra $45 a week to bring her rent in line with the current market.

This means that from December her rent will increase 20 per cent from $235 per week to $280—nearly half of her fortnightly aged pension!


compressed-chris-robert--ryDtcapIas-unsplash.jpeg
More pensioners struggle financially with the increasing rent. Credit: Unsplash



Since she had nowhere to go, she had no choice but to pay this amount.

‘I sent them an email, and I said I would accept the increase because I had no choice, but that I was doing it under duress,’ King said.

Considering the condition and age of the unit, which she estimated was built in the 1970s, it was far from perfect, according to King. She pointed out that with it not having any insulation, having rattling windows, and her paying a power bill of nearly $200 a month due to her medical condition—the 20 per cent rent increase did not seem fair.

‘Everything seems to centre around people living around cities, with the shortage of accommodation and the cost of accommodation. It's even worse in rural areas,’ King complained.

‘They keep building new houses, but they're for retirees that are coming from the city to the country, you know, that have sold their homes in Sydney, Melbourne, wherever, so they have the money to buy,’ she added.

‘Then there are people buying investment properties where they can lease these places out for $400, $500, $600 a week. They're just not building any affordable housing.’



King relies mostly on charity and aged care services from non-profit providers.

‘I can't afford to cut back on meds,’ King exclaimed.

‘I get Meals on Wheels, because as well as the lung problems, I have bad arthritis, so I can't do a lot of my own cooking anymore.’

‘I use Oxley Community Transport to go out and socialise because I don't have a family here, so I'll probably have to cut back on that, and I'll probably have to cut back on groceries as well,’ she continued.

‘In rural areas, because of the cost of fuel and transport, the cost of groceries here and services in general are high… your dollar doesn't go very far anymore.’



Jacqui Bijnens, Chief Operating Officer of real estate company PRD Tamworth, said that while vacancy rates in the area have increased to just two per cent in the last 12 months, the price for two-bedroom properties surged.

‘The increase in rents is getting higher for people living in three-bedroom, four-bedroom houses, so some of them are looking to downsize,’ Bijnens said.

She added, ‘Some people are thinking, “Instead of having that spare room I'm going to be looking more for a two-bedroom house or unit,” so the demand for those two-bedroom properties has increased… pushing up that price.’

‘The issue here is really a matter of supply and social affordable housing, and that is one Tamworth Regional Council have been looking into.

‘As well as how we can get even more investors back into the property market, and how we can get more properties built in Tamworth that will cater to the needs because the supply is not there for the people who need those two-bedroom properties.’

In New South Wales, landlords can increase rent once every 12 months for periodic leases, and they must give the tenants 60 days written notice regarding such increase. If the landlord increases rent ‘excessively,’ tenants may complain to the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal within 30 days.



National Seniors Chief Operating Officer Chris Grice believes the rental crisis severely affects pensioners in regional and rural areas who don’t have homeownership.

He said, ‘When the government designed the Aged Pension many years ago, it was designed with the assumption that older people would own their own home.’

‘And now we sort of know from the Retirement Income Review, and even research we've done ourselves, that the number of older renters that are now in the marketplace, there's just so many more of them now,’ he added.

‘Particularly for older women, maybe they don't have large superannuation balances, or assets behind them, maybe as part of a separation they've had to sell the family home so they've moved into this rental space—and now with the cost of living crisis—they just don't have the cash.’




Grice emphasised that the solution to the crisis was more housing stock, which wouldn’t help those already going through tough times.

‘The pension should at least be consistent with what's happening with real inflation, a realistic and practical review of what the real cost of living is and to make sure the pension is in line with that,’ he said.

‘We also want indexation of the Commonwealth rent assistance to keep pace with these rental increases that are coming through. Because by the time they pay rent, it doesn't leave them with a lot to pay for what is now high fuel prices and groceries.’
Key Takeaways
  • A 69-year-old pensioner from South Tamworth has detailed her struggle against escalating rental costs in Australia's ongoing housing crisis.
  • Given the unit's age and condition, and its lack of insulation and rattling windows, the 20 per cent rent increase seemed unfair to King, especially considering her high monthly power bill due to a medical condition.
  • National Seniors Chief Operating Officer Chris Grice said that the rental crisis has left many seniors in rural areas financially vulnerable, as they were initially assumed to own their homes when the Aged Pension was designed, and now struggle with the cost of living due to increased renting.
  • The solution proposed involves a more realistic evaluation of living costs and pension amounts, as well as increased indexation of Commonwealth rent assistance.

Members, what do you think of King’s story? Do you have any ideas in mind about possible ways the government can help ease the effect of increasing rent, especially among retirees? Share your thoughts in the comments below!
 
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Tha
Retirement can be riddled with daily financial and other strains.

While seniors may be receiving the aged pension, the costs of food, rent, medical services, and other essentials can eat up a large chunk of your monthly budget.

In some areas of the country, the rental crisis has gotten so bad that pensioners are just an increase in rent away from bankruptcy.



Annemarie King, a 69-year-old resident of South Tamworth, New South Wales, recently received written notice from her real estate agent that she would have to pay an extra $45 a week to bring her rent in line with the current market.

This means that from December her rent will increase 20 per cent from $235 per week to $280—nearly half of her fortnightly aged pension!


View attachment 34196
More pensioners struggle financially with the increasing rent. Credit: Unsplash



Since she had nowhere to go, she had no choice but to pay this amount.

‘I sent them an email, and I said I would accept the increase because I had no choice, but that I was doing it under duress,’ King said.

Considering the condition and age of the unit, which she estimated was built in the 1970s, it was far from perfect, according to King. She pointed out that with it not having any insulation, having rattling windows, and her paying a power bill of nearly $200 a month due to her medical condition—the 20 per cent rent increase did not seem fair.

‘Everything seems to centre around people living around cities, with the shortage of accommodation and the cost of accommodation. It's even worse in rural areas,’ King complained.

‘They keep building new houses, but they're for retirees that are coming from the city to the country, you know, that have sold their homes in Sydney, Melbourne, wherever, so they have the money to buy,’ she added.

‘Then there are people buying investment properties where they can lease these places out for $400, $500, $600 a week. They're just not building any affordable housing.’



King relies mostly on charity and aged care services from non-profit providers.

‘I can't afford to cut back on meds,’ King exclaimed.

‘I get Meals on Wheels, because as well as the lung problems, I have bad arthritis, so I can't do a lot of my own cooking anymore.’

‘I use Oxley Community Transport to go out and socialise because I don't have a family here, so I'll probably have to cut back on that, and I'll probably have to cut back on groceries as well,’ she continued.

‘In rural areas, because of the cost of fuel and transport, the cost of groceries here and services in general are high… your dollar doesn't go very far anymore.’



Jacqui Bijnens, Chief Operating Officer of real estate company PRD Tamworth, said that while vacancy rates in the area have increased to just two per cent in the last 12 months, the price for two-bedroom properties surged.

‘The increase in rents is getting higher for people living in three-bedroom, four-bedroom houses, so some of them are looking to downsize,’ Bijnens said.

She added, ‘Some people are thinking, “Instead of having that spare room I'm going to be looking more for a two-bedroom house or unit,” so the demand for those two-bedroom properties has increased… pushing up that price.’

‘The issue here is really a matter of supply and social affordable housing, and that is one Tamworth Regional Council have been looking into.

‘As well as how we can get even more investors back into the property market, and how we can get more properties built in Tamworth that will cater to the needs because the supply is not there for the people who need those two-bedroom properties.’

In New South Wales, landlords can increase rent once every 12 months for periodic leases, and they must give the tenants 60 days written notice regarding such increase. If the landlord increases rent ‘excessively,’ tenants may complain to the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal within 30 days.



National Seniors Chief Operating Officer Chris Grice believes the rental crisis severely affects pensioners in regional and rural areas who don’t have homeownership.

He said, ‘When the government designed the Aged Pension many years ago, it was designed with the assumption that older people would own their own home.’

‘And now we sort of know from the Retirement Income Review, and even research we've done ourselves, that the number of older renters that are now in the marketplace, there's just so many more of them now,’ he added.

‘Particularly for older women, maybe they don't have large superannuation balances, or assets behind them, maybe as part of a separation they've had to sell the family home so they've moved into this rental space—and now with the cost of living crisis—they just don't have the cash.’




Grice emphasised that the solution to the crisis was more housing stock, which wouldn’t help those already going through tough times.

‘The pension should at least be consistent with what's happening with real inflation, a realistic and practical review of what the real cost of living is and to make sure the pension is in line with that,’ he said.

‘We also want indexation of the Commonwealth rent assistance to keep pace with these rental increases that are coming through. Because by the time they pay rent, it doesn't leave them with a lot to pay for what is now high fuel prices and groceries.’
Key Takeaways

  • A 69-year-old pensioner from South Tamworth has detailed her struggle against escalating rental costs in Australia's ongoing housing crisis.
  • Given the unit's age and condition, and its lack of insulation and rattling windows, the 20 per cent rent increase seemed unfair to King, especially considering her high monthly power bill due to a medical condition.
  • National Seniors Chief Operating Officer Chris Grice said that the rental crisis has left many seniors in rural areas financially vulnerable, as they were initially assumed to own their homes when the Aged Pension was designed, and now struggle with the cost of living due to increased renting.
  • The solution proposed involves a more realistic evaluation of living costs and pension amounts, as well as increased indexation of Commonwealth rent assistance.

Members, what do you think of King’s story? Do you have any ideas in mind about possible ways the government can help ease the effect of increasing rent, especially among retirees? Share your thoughts in the comments below!
Thats cheap mine’s going up on nov 19th from $350.00 a week to $375.00 a week and I’m on jobseeker. I turned 65 on 1st July no pension for me until I’m 67. So I wouldn’t be complaining it’s hard to get anywhere else these days.😞
 
Our dollars go nowhere. I've just tried to do an online shop, and aimed to keep it under $50. A box of 12 pouches of food for my cat, Chloe, is $14.50. A half VERY small cabbage is $3.50. S50 buys so little now. With such rampant inflation going on and gross profiteering it behoves our government to put the reins on rental property owners. I've been a rental property owner in the past, and I understand the costs associated with ownership. But things are desperately hard for people on pensions. It's frightening.
 
Our dollars go nowhere. I've just tried to do an online shop, and aimed to keep it under $50. A box of 12 pouches of food for my cat, Chloe, is $14.50. A half VERY small cabbage is $3.50. S50 buys so little now. With such rampant inflation going on and gross profiteering it behoves our government to put the reins on rental property owners. I've been a rental property owner in the past, and I understand the costs associated with ownership. But things are desperately hard for people on pensions. It's frightening.
Your are so right you can’t get much for $50 these days. Rent going up means $50 less for food and bills. Goodbye chokky wokky cat comes first.😍
 
Our dollars go nowhere. I've just tried to do an online shop, and aimed to keep it under $50. A box of 12 pouches of food for my cat, Chloe, is $14.50. A half VERY small cabbage is $3.50. S50 buys so little now. With such rampant inflation going on and gross profiteering it behoves our government to put the reins on rental property owners. I've been a rental property owner in the past, and I understand the costs associated with ownership. But things are desperately hard for people on pensions. It's frightening.
Try whiskas tinned food for your cat 4cans for $5.00 from woollies. Goes a lot further than pouches and a big bag cat bikkies is cheap and also goes a long way.😋
 
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My heart goes out to all those pensioners. These are the people who worked hard all their lives to make this country what it is and then to end up hardly being able to support themselves saddens me.
We were in the same situation a year ago. Our son is a builder and built us a home out of his own pocket as he was disgusted with the rents continually going up. Now we only have to pay for our electricity. We are one of the lucky ones but I still worry for those who aren't.
 
I feel extremely blessed that we worked hard and did without a lot of frills and treats during our working years so we could pay off our mortgage.
I don't know how we would cope now if we were still having to meet that debt.
A 74 year old acquaintance of mine came up from Sydney because he was finding it difficult on the pension. While here, he got online and did the rounds all over Australia trying to find an affordable spot. He has a little money left from a divorce, but not enough to buy something nearing the norm. An agent in Adelaide lured him there with wow prices. So, on the bus he got and went there via Melbourne. By the way, I wouldn't want to be trying to set up there...holy cow...the prices.
Long story short, he got to Adelaide, presented himself at the agency and was told, oh, we thought you were just fishing. It was all balderdash.
So, what do you do, who do you believe.
It's bad enough that pensioners and unemployed people have to go through so much but big shot braggers are making false statements...why, I don't know.
My heart goes out to all of you who are struggling to keep the roof over your heads. Something has to happen soon, or, there will be a major recession and a lot more folk homeless.
 
Tha

Thats cheap mine’s going up on nov 19th from $350.00 a week to $375.00 a week and I’m on jobseeker. I turned 65 on 1st July no pension for me until I’m 67. So I wouldn’t be complaining it’s hard to get anywhere else these days.😞
Try a jump from $690 a week the $835 a week.... it means I have to turn over every $ before I spend it and have cut back on other fixed expenses. I wash in cold water and am a fiend on the uses of electricity. I now shower once a fortnight and set the timer for a short shower.
 
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Retirement can be riddled with daily financial and other strains.

While seniors may be receiving the aged pension, the costs of food, rent, medical services, and other essentials can eat up a large chunk of your monthly budget.

In some areas of the country, the rental crisis has gotten so bad that pensioners are just an increase in rent away from bankruptcy.



Annemarie King, a 69-year-old resident of South Tamworth, New South Wales, recently received written notice from her real estate agent that she would have to pay an extra $45 a week to bring her rent in line with the current market.

This means that from December her rent will increase 20 per cent from $235 per week to $280—nearly half of her fortnightly aged pension!


View attachment 34196
More pensioners struggle financially with the increasing rent. Credit: Unsplash



Since she had nowhere to go, she had no choice but to pay this amount.

‘I sent them an email, and I said I would accept the increase because I had no choice, but that I was doing it under duress,’ King said.

Considering the condition and age of the unit, which she estimated was built in the 1970s, it was far from perfect, according to King. She pointed out that with it not having any insulation, having rattling windows, and her paying a power bill of nearly $200 a month due to her medical condition—the 20 per cent rent increase did not seem fair.

‘Everything seems to centre around people living around cities, with the shortage of accommodation and the cost of accommodation. It's even worse in rural areas,’ King complained.

‘They keep building new houses, but they're for retirees that are coming from the city to the country, you know, that have sold their homes in Sydney, Melbourne, wherever, so they have the money to buy,’ she added.

‘Then there are people buying investment properties where they can lease these places out for $400, $500, $600 a week. They're just not building any affordable housing.’



King relies mostly on charity and aged care services from non-profit providers.

‘I can't afford to cut back on meds,’ King exclaimed.

‘I get Meals on Wheels, because as well as the lung problems, I have bad arthritis, so I can't do a lot of my own cooking anymore.’

‘I use Oxley Community Transport to go out and socialise because I don't have a family here, so I'll probably have to cut back on that, and I'll probably have to cut back on groceries as well,’ she continued.

‘In rural areas, because of the cost of fuel and transport, the cost of groceries here and services in general are high… your dollar doesn't go very far anymore.’



Jacqui Bijnens, Chief Operating Officer of real estate company PRD Tamworth, said that while vacancy rates in the area have increased to just two per cent in the last 12 months, the price for two-bedroom properties surged.

‘The increase in rents is getting higher for people living in three-bedroom, four-bedroom houses, so some of them are looking to downsize,’ Bijnens said.

She added, ‘Some people are thinking, “Instead of having that spare room I'm going to be looking more for a two-bedroom house or unit,” so the demand for those two-bedroom properties has increased… pushing up that price.’

‘The issue here is really a matter of supply and social affordable housing, and that is one Tamworth Regional Council have been looking into.

‘As well as how we can get even more investors back into the property market, and how we can get more properties built in Tamworth that will cater to the needs because the supply is not there for the people who need those two-bedroom properties.’

In New South Wales, landlords can increase rent once every 12 months for periodic leases, and they must give the tenants 60 days written notice regarding such increase. If the landlord increases rent ‘excessively,’ tenants may complain to the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal within 30 days.



National Seniors Chief Operating Officer Chris Grice believes the rental crisis severely affects pensioners in regional and rural areas who don’t have homeownership.

He said, ‘When the government designed the Aged Pension many years ago, it was designed with the assumption that older people would own their own home.’

‘And now we sort of know from the Retirement Income Review, and even research we've done ourselves, that the number of older renters that are now in the marketplace, there's just so many more of them now,’ he added.

‘Particularly for older women, maybe they don't have large superannuation balances, or assets behind them, maybe as part of a separation they've had to sell the family home so they've moved into this rental space—and now with the cost of living crisis—they just don't have the cash.’




Grice emphasised that the solution to the crisis was more housing stock, which wouldn’t help those already going through tough times.

‘The pension should at least be consistent with what's happening with real inflation, a realistic and practical review of what the real cost of living is and to make sure the pension is in line with that,’ he said.

‘We also want indexation of the Commonwealth rent assistance to keep pace with these rental increases that are coming through. Because by the time they pay rent, it doesn't leave them with a lot to pay for what is now high fuel prices and groceries.’
Key Takeaways

  • A 69-year-old pensioner from South Tamworth has detailed her struggle against escalating rental costs in Australia's ongoing housing crisis.
  • Given the unit's age and condition, and its lack of insulation and rattling windows, the 20 per cent rent increase seemed unfair to King, especially considering her high monthly power bill due to a medical condition.
  • National Seniors Chief Operating Officer Chris Grice said that the rental crisis has left many seniors in rural areas financially vulnerable, as they were initially assumed to own their homes when the Aged Pension was designed, and now struggle with the cost of living due to increased renting.
  • The solution proposed involves a more realistic evaluation of living costs and pension amounts, as well as increased indexation of Commonwealth rent assistance.

Members, what do you think of King’s story? Do you have any ideas in mind about possible ways the government can help ease the effect of increasing rent, especially among retirees? Share your thoughts in the comments below!
Nobody can say they weren't told. That it wouldn't be easy under Albanese
 
It is a sad reflection on governments that they can’t be bothered to try and help all the people who are struggling to survive. People can’t live on any sort of benefits they get from Centrelink, especially people who have to pay rent. Airbus Albasleazy is never in the country long enough to have any idea what is going on, the cost to taxpayers for all his overseas trips would be better off being spent on helping people to live above the poverty line. With all the technology available these days I don’t see why world leaders can’t hold all these meetings without leaving their home countries, instead of trying to big note and out do each other by wasting money on pomp and ceremony that rarely achieves anything of significance anyway. Leaders are supposed to be elected to represent the people, not using their position to see how much of the world they can visit at the taxpayers expense.
 
Our rent up from $350 a week to $520 a week because we had to move as they sold the place we were renting and the only available rental for us at the time was a massive 4 bedroom home with 2 loungerooms and a massive double garage which is way 2 big for a couple of pensioners. This home could of gone to a family with children but we were told by the real estate that the owners prefeffered an elderly couple to rent over a family with kids. Our lease is up in January and we are expecting the rent to go up to $580 a week, we live in a small country regional town as we can't afford to move away and all our family live here. I think the government should be doing something about the lack of affordable housing for the seniors and should also be re accessing the rental assistance scheme as rents seems to increase far more often than what the rental assistance has increases. Also the rent assistance in my eyes does not help at all as it's way to low against the cost of renting a property these days, it's virtually worthless.
 
Our rent up from $350 a week to $520 a week because we had to move as they sold the place we were renting and the only available rental for us at the time was a massive 4 bedroom home with 2 loungerooms and a massive double garage which is way 2 big for a couple of pensioners. This home could of gone to a family with children but we were told by the real estate that the owners prefeffered an elderly couple to rent over a family with kids. Our lease is up in January and we are expecting the rent to go up to $580 a week, we live in a small country regional town as we can't afford to move away and all our family live here. I think the government should be doing something about the lack of affordable housing for the seniors and should also be re accessing the rental assistance scheme as rents seems to increase far more often than what the rental assistance has increases. Also the rent assistance in my eyes does not help at all as it's way to low against the cost of renting a property these days, it's virtually worthless.
Gotta agree with you there.🙀
 
For those going through this stress right now, and goodness knows when affordable housing will begin being built, surely the government could at least implement temporary assistance at this point in time? This could be based, as pointed out in the article, on "a more realistic evaluation of living costs and pension amounts, as well as increased indexation of Commonwealth rent assistance".
 
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Nobody can say they weren't told. That it wouldn't be easy under Albanese
No he is cleaning up the enormous mess that was left by all those years of LNP neglect ... and to believe otherwise is just unmitigated rubbish.
 

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