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Australia_location_map_recolored

Across Australia, it’s not a secret that rent has generally been ticking upwards – much to the dismay of renters – with revealingly stronger growth in some areas than others.

The latest Australian Bureau of Statistics details show that Western Australia is the state that has grown more than any other, with a 77% uptick from 2006 to 2011. In 2006, it was recorded at $170 per week, however in 2011 it was noted as $300.

Speaking of growth in the statistics, the ABS director of rural and regional statistics, Lisa Conolly, said that while Western Australia overall grew the most, the area with the biggest uptick was in Queensland.

This was a terrifying headline figure of 570% growth over the period in Weipa, in Queensland’s far north, and the picture overall looks fairly drab on the surface for renters.

“Rental costs have also increased by twice as much as wages with the median weekly household income increasing from $1,027 in 2006 to $1,234 in 2011, up 20%,” she explained.

However, Conolly said that it wasn’t quite the unexpected drastic growth, for Weipa at least, that the figure suggests.

“Local government areas in Western Australia recorded some of the biggest growth in median rent payments in Australia, with eight out of the 10 fastest growing regions located in Western Australia. However, Weipa, in far north Queensland, came in at the top, reflecting a change from employer owned housing to private rental arrangements,” recorded Conolly.

Despite this, in what will come as a surprise to almost no one, it remains local government areas (LGA) in Sydney that record the highest rent. And, as can be attested by the overwhelming ‘red’ on all of the zoomed in capital cities, it’s costly to rent in Australia’s capitals.

Read the full details here. http://www.propertyobserver.com.au/finding/30000-areas-with-highest-rent-across-australia.html