Landlords say pets destroy homes—tenants say they’re family. Who’s right?

Casey Munro thought his life would stay divided between his home in Campbelltown and his dog Elsie, who lived with his mother.

Instead, a landmark tribunal ruling gave him the right to bring her home under new pet-friendly rental laws.

But the journey to get there was far from smooth.


When Mr Munro applied to keep Elsie, his border collie, his property manager rejected the request.

They argued the dog could cause more damage than his $1,300 bond would cover—a clause allowed under the May reforms.

Mr Munro said the rejection came only after delays and claims he had filled the form incorrectly.


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Tenant fights back after pet request refused. Image source: Pexels/Lum3n
Disclaimer: This is a stock image used for illustrative purposes only and does not depict the actual person, item, or event described.


With little choice, he took the matter to the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal (NCAT).

He presented articles and a statement about Elsie’s training, while the property manager submitted inspection reports, a letter, and an insurance article on the energetic nature of border collies.

The tribunal sided with Mr Munro, ruling the landlord’s refusal unreasonable due to insufficient evidence.

‘Allowing me to have a dog improved my fitness, my mental health and just … my living standards,’ Mr Munro said.

‘It was a bit of stress when I knew I was going to have to take it to court, but it was worth it.’


The decision highlighted how the new laws are reshaping the balance between tenants and landlords in New South Wales.

Tenants’ Union advocacy manager Eloise Parrab welcomed the reforms, saying 30 per cent of renters nationally had pets and needed better protections.

‘Not being able to do blanket bans on pets really impacts on people’s abilities to find housing,’ she said.

But not all property owners supported the changes.

Nowra landlord Brenda Morrison, who owns several homes, said she feared pets would damage her properties.

‘Someone can say, I have an inside dog, and you just have to deal with it,’ she said.


Ms Morrison, who keeps her own pets including a dog, turtle, fish, and crickets, said she felt landlords had lost rights.

‘I feel like I have no rights now,’ she said.

The legislation does still allow landlords to refuse in certain circumstances, such as if there are more than four animals, or if fencing and open space are inadequate for the animal’s welfare.

Applications may also be rejected if a pet is likely to cause damage beyond the bond, or if the landlord lives on the property.

Real Estate Institute of NSW chief executive Tim McKibbin said disputes would inevitably flow to NCAT.

He added that landlords now had extra responsibilities, including maintaining fencing if the property was otherwise suitable for pets.

‘It may be wonderful that tenants are going to have some additional rights, but that only means something if you can get a rental,’ he said.


If one tenant’s battle over a border collie shows how much the rental landscape is shifting, the next big changes could affect thousands more.

The laws around pets are only part of a wider shake-up that is reshaping the rights and responsibilities of both renters and landlords.

Here’s a look at what’s about to change—and how it might impact anyone navigating the rental market.

Read more: Tenants will see rental rule changes in a few days! Here's what renters need to know

Key Takeaways
  • A tenant in Campbelltown won the right to keep his border collie under new NSW pet laws.
  • NCAT found the landlord’s rejection unreasonable due to lack of evidence.
  • The reforms prevent blanket pet bans but still allow limited refusals.
  • Landlords now face added obligations, including maintaining fencing for pets.

The question now is whether these reforms will ease the housing struggle—or make rentals even harder to secure.
 

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They obviously didn't do any inspections, that would have sorted that problem alot earlier. You do have to stay on top of properties and for this reason I have never bern interested. You are either very lucky or can be extremely unlucky and not worth the stress in my opinion.
The house we rented out we did inspections every 6 months. These people who were a family of 5 Lebanese totally destroyed the house in less than 6 months. Nearly every window broken. Kitchen cupboard doors off, holes in the wall, carpet pulled up and even the ceiling was hanging down because they used the ceiling to store stuff through the man hole.
The garden was a huge mess
 
All I can say is that the glass was very poor quality, the glass had a coating on it (reflective film?) or the dog had a huge amount of sand on their paws.

It is physically impossible from a scientific point of view for a dog's claws alone to scratch glass. The Moh's scale, used to measure the hardness of minerals, metals, manmade and natural substances, has keratin (the stuff nails and claws are composed off) at 1.5 to 3 and glass ranging from 5.5 to 6, with quartz, the main component of sand, at about 7.
Yes, that is true. Maybe it was poor quality glass.
I did a building inspection on a house in the Blue Mountains years ago. The elderly lady known locally as The Cat Lady had passed away. She used to collect cats. Even the backyard was full of cages she had built, there was no room left, just cages. Every room in the house had scratches on all of the gyprock walls, up to a height of maybe 60-80cm. The skirting boards were ripped to bits. She used to lock the cats in rooms in the house. The place smelled like a public dunny.
 
The house we rented out we did inspections every 6 months. These people who were a family of 5 Lebanese totally destroyed the house in less than 6 months. Nearly every window broken. Kitchen cupboard doors off, holes in the wall, carpet pulled up and even the ceiling was hanging down because they used the ceiling to store stuff through the man hole.
The garden was a huge mess
Lebanese are the worst. I had a Lebanese family living next door to me when I was living in Dundas. The family owned a takeaway food store in Leichhardt. The lady there bought a new stove, and wanted me to install it in their kitchen. I had to take out their old stove that was encrusted so thick with spilled and baked-on food, that I had to wear gloves. And then I had to get rid of the filthy thing in the back of my nice new red truck to the tip.
Many years ago when I first got my Builders Licence, my accountant was a mate of mine, and when we set up my company, I remember exactly what he said to me......"Never hire a Lebo. They are greedy and lazy, and that is not a very good combination" It was good advice, and I can say that the job I did for my next door neighbour was the first and last of any work I did for Lebanese people.
 
All I can say is that the glass was very poor quality, the glass had a coating on it (reflective film?) or the dog had a huge amount of sand on their paws.

It is physically impossible from a scientific point of view for a dog's claws alone to scratch glass. The Moh's scale, used to measure the hardness of minerals, metals, manmade and natural substances, has keratin (the stuff nails and claws are composed off) at 1.5 to 3 and glass ranging from 5.5 to 6, with quartz, the main component of sand, at about 7.
 
Wonderful link!

I clicked on it, asked to confirm that I am not a robot, asked by a further dodgy link to allow access to my computer THEN swamped with "Norton Anti Virus" messages saying my computer is infected with viruses! But I managed to get around it!

Anyway, I read that article yesterday and found it to be mostly factual but lacking in scientific discourse.

Thank you @Clancieblue!
 
Wonderful link!

I clicked on it, asked to confirm that I am not a robot, asked by a further dodgy link to allow access to my computer THEN swamped with "Norton Anti Virus" messages saying my computer is infected with viruses! But I managed to get around it!

Anyway, I read that article yesterday and found it to be mostly factual but lacking in scientific discourse.

Thank you @Clancieblue!
Sorry about that Vegie. Unfortunately, I know what happened to the door. Maybe the dog had a diamond ring on his claws. 💍;)
 
Sorry about that Vegie. Unfortunately, I know what happened to the door. Maybe the dog had a diamond ring on his claws. 💍;)
Maybe Paris Hilton's pet chihuahua Princess was to blame....
 
My husband and I had two rental properties and we were lucky in one of them where we had a lady who was a great tenant and always paid her rent on time and kept the house immaculate. She was our tenant for 6 years and we never raised the rent, even though the Property Manager kept telling us every year to raise it, because she was such a good tenant we refused. In the other house we had we had nothing but bad tenants, e.g. not paying their rent, trashing the house, having pets when we told them we didn't want dogs, etc etc. We have now sold both properties as our good tenant moved out so we decided to sell both properties. We would have kept one property but we could see even a couple of years ago when we sold how things were going regarding having an investment property and that's why we sold. We knew that landlords were going to lose all their rights and it would be a nightmare when you have a bad tenant (which I agree most of them are) so we sold up. The problem is that now so many more people will sell up who have rental properties due to all these changes which means there will be even less properties out there for people to rent, especially when you consider the mass immigration being brought into our country and they all need somewhere to live as well.
So right MistyB1. Our kids sold their investment properties too. Less properties means higher rents. I don't get how tenants or government think making life harder for landlords is a win for tenants.
If I don't want a pet in my house, why should I be forced to allow a tenant to have one? It's MY house. The tenant wants to live in it, they should respect my rules. But the reality now is that you can't even get rid of a bad tenant who is wrecking your property and not paying rent without expensive legal costs and long delays. Why would anyone invest in rental properties under these conditions? It's time society woke up to the harsh realities of life. Tenants need a roof. Keep telling landlords they have no rights and soon there will be no roof. It's simple supply and demand. Seems dumb politicians just don't get it. Well, if they did, the nation wouldn't be heavily in debt despite constant increases in taxes. Get rid of politicians - who are overpaid and useless - and let ordinary Australians with common sense govern. We'd fix the problems fast!
 
Unfortunately, to my detriment, I have discovered that most pet owners (renters) are not responsible and the bond doesn't even begin to cover the damage.
People with destructive dogs are usually too lazy to train them, and in turn are also too lazy to look after the property.
Believe it ir not we once had a $137,000 capital loss on a property. 18 months of unpaid rent, 18 months back and forward to court, stolen furniture and expensive drapes, a $3,000 stolen chandeliers complete renovation of the house and all the gardens which needed to be relandscaped. There are some real feral out there.
Well, I have done the experiment.

We have sliding glass doors made to AS/NZS2208 Class A 10TH - Safety Glazing Materials in Buildings. The 10TH means that it is 10mm thick, toughened heat strengthened glass.

I used the tines of a stainless steel fork (which is about 4.5 on the Moh's scale) in an attempt to scratch the glass but to no avail.

You must have bought your sliding doors from Temu. :ROFLMAO:
Why would you try to scratch you door
with a fork Vegie???
 
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Why would you try to scratch you door
with a fork Vegie???
I watched him do it, the glass around the balcony. I thought, what the hell is he doing? When he came in, I asked him and he said he was doing an experiment. I’m glad the glass didn’t scratch!
 
Who voted in there money grabbing mongrels in anyway? You have given Airmiles Albo and his cronies the green light to tax everyone and everything. GST, up to 15 percent! Death taxes, and for the icing on the cake, may as well tax any spare bedrooms in your home? Seriously, the greed is pathetic, and I’m sure we are all loving living in a socialist country. What happened to us, and how do we stop it. I wonder if Albo will welcome strangers into his home to avoid the taxes, or has he exempted himself from that too, just like the taxes on super! Gezzabel.
 
I watched him do it, the glass around the balcony. I thought, what the hell is he doing? When he came in, I asked him and he said he was doing an experiment. I’m glad the glass didn’t scratch!
You should have taken a photo
 
You should have taken a photo
Yes, I should have. I was just so dumbfounded because I had no idea why or what he was doing.
@Veggiepatch is a man of many surprises. No wonder I love him! I know you’d understand @Suzanne rose! Wish I’d known him in days gone by too.
 
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