Perth's rental market has never been tighter. As of July 2026, the city's vacancy rate has collapsed to roughly 0.7% — the lowest recorded figure for any Australian capital this decade — while the median weekly rent for a house now sits at $655, up from $520 just two years ago. For the tens of thousands of tenants across suburbs from Cannington to Clarkson, that is not an abstraction. It is an extra $135 a week that many simply do not have.
The timing matters because this is not a temporary dip. Perth's population grew by approximately 3.2% in the twelve months to March 2026, driven by interstate migration from Victoria and New South Wales, continued fly-in fly-out worker demand from the Pilbara and Goldfields, and a surge of skilled migrants entering on employer-sponsored visas through the Federal Government's Critical Skills stream. New dwelling completions, meanwhile, have failed to keep pace — Master Builders WA reported in May that construction pipelines are running between 18 and 24 months behind pre-approval stages due to ongoing trades shortages.
Where the Pressure Is Most Acute
The northern corridor is bearing the sharpest end of the squeeze. Joondalup and the surrounding City of Wanneroo local government area — now home to more than 230,000 residents — recorded median advertised rents of $670 per week for four-bedroom houses in June, according to REIWA data. Rental listings in Currambine and Tapping have been sitting on market for an average of three days before being snapped up, with agents reporting application pools of 30 to 50 prospective tenants per property. The City of Stirling is not far behind: suburbs including Balga and Nollamara, historically considered affordable entry points, are now asking $580 to $610 per week for modest three-bedroom homes.
State Government programs aimed at relieving pressure have so far produced limited results. Keystart, the low-deposit home loan scheme administered through the Western Australian Government, reported a record 4,200 loan approvals in the 2025-26 financial year. The Department of Communities also flagged a 340-dwelling social housing expansion in the Ellenbrook and Alkimos growth corridors, though most of those units will not be habitable before late 2027. For renters in the market today, that timeline offers little comfort.
What Buyers Need to Understand Right Now
The case for buying rather than renting has rarely been clearer on paper, but execution is harder than it looks. Perth's median house price sits at approximately $680,000, which means buyers on a 5% deposit need $34,000 in savings plus stamp duty — around $26,000 on a purchase at that price point — before even approaching a lender. The Keystart scheme lifts access by reducing the required deposit to 2% for eligible borrowers earning under $180,000 annually as a couple, but demand for those loans has stretched approval times to eight weeks.
Buyers targeting established suburbs within 15 kilometres of the CBD are increasingly being priced toward units and apartments. Scarborough and Innaloo have seen unit prices rise 18% over the past 18 months, with one-bedroom apartments on West Coast Highway now regularly clearing $450,000 at auction. First-home buyers who can flex on location are finding better value in the Armadale corridor, where median house prices in suburbs like Camillo and Brookdale remain under $520,000 — though even those figures represent 22% growth from mid-2024.
The practical advice from mortgage brokers operating in the Perth market is consistent: get finance pre-approval in place before inspecting properties, because competitive offers now require same-week turnaround. Buyers should also review the First Home Owner Grant, which remains at $10,000 for new builds in Western Australia, and consider whether a house-and-land package in the Yanchep or Eglinton growth areas — where titled lots are still available under $300,000 — suits their timeline better than competing for scarce established stock. Sitting on the rental sideline costs more each month than it did six months ago, and the arithmetic is only moving in one direction.