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Crackdown on Affordability: Regional WA Rents Blow Past Capital City Benchmarks

Analysing whether renters and buyers fare any better in regional Western Australia compared to high-demand Perth suburbs.

By Perth Property Desk · Published 4 July 2026, 1:18 pm

3 min read

UpdatedUpdated 4 July 2026, 2:07 pm

Crackdown on Affordability: Regional WA Rents Blow Past Capital City Benchmarks
Photo: Photo by Egor Komarov on Pexels

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Renters in Albany, Geraldton and Kalgoorlie are now paying asking rents that rival some of Perth’s tightly-held neighbourhoods, according to fresh analysis from property research firm CoreLogic. In the latest quarterly snapshot, regional WA’s rental markets have climbed to an average weekly rent of $635—nearly on par with inner-city hotspots and representing a new squeeze for would-be tenants and buyers alike.

Surge Driven by Mining and Migration

This sharp jump in regional rents matters as a growing number of Western Australians look beyond Perth’s pricey gates for homes. The state’s mining boom has turbocharged demand for workers in Pilbara and Goldfields towns; meanwhile, local families priced out of central suburbs like Mount Lawley or Wembley are seeking alternatives along the coast or inland.

WA’s Department of Communities confirmed on Tuesday that public housing waiting lists have ballooned in towns such as Bunbury and Port Hedland, with median rents increasing by more than 15% year-on-year since June 2025. In some cases—for instance, a three-bedder near York Street in Albany—the weekly rent is listed online at $680, equalling the entire Perth median.

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Data Snapshot: A Pinch Across All Borders

Domain’s June 2026 figures reveal an uncomfortable truth: while Perth remains the nation’s fastest-growing capital for both renters and buyers, regional pockets display the same crisis symptoms. Wanneroo’s average rental vacancy hit a record low of 0.7% last month. In the Goldfields, Ray White Kalgoorlie listed just 11 properties under $600 per week, down from 35 last July.

Buying remains only marginally more possible outside the city. The REIWA House Price Index shows the median home price in Greater Geraldton crept above $480,000 by mid-2026—a leap of 21% over eighteen months. Meanwhile, Perth’s northern satellites, Joondalup and Clarkson, rarely yield options under $550,000, making the regional/city affordability gap much narrower than previous years.

For renters still considering the move—perhaps in search of cheaper living and more available stock—the reality is mixed. A Leederville apartment comes to market at nearly the same rental price as a central Busselton townhouse. This year’s state budget allocated an extra $72 million via the Remote Regional Rent Relief program, but local property managers warn demand will far outstrip supply at current trends.

Advice for Renters and Buyers in 2026

So what happens next? Real estate agents in both regional WA and metropolitan Perth expect ‘upwards pressure’ on rents through the Christmas period as major mining projects and spring travel start drawing more people into the market. Analysts point to towns like Manjimup and Karratha as flashpoints for further rent hikes, but suggest budget-conscious tenants keep an eye on fringe suburbs along the Armadale line or in Rockingham, where advertised vacancies ticked marginally higher to 1.2% in June.

For buyers, the reality is starker: home loans remain out of reach for many, even as state government schemes sweeten first-time purchases in outer metro areas such as Ellenbrook or Byford. The bottom line—whether you’re in Cottesloe or Carnarvon—is that neither renting nor buying delivers the relief many hoped would come as the WA economy powers forward. Watching closely, those navigating Perth’s property crunch may need to keep their sights flexible and their finances in sharp focus through 2026 and beyond.

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Published by The Daily Perth

This article was produced by the The Daily Perth editorial desk and covers property in Perth. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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