Affordability Snapshot

Sydney rent affordability — Q1 2026

Data period: January – March 2026 · Source: NSW DCJ Rental Bond data + ABS Census · 608 suburbs tracked

Median 1BR rent
$600/wk
1-bedroom weekly
Median 2BR rent
$700/wk
2-bedroom weekly
Median 3BR rent
$848/wk
3-bedroom weekly
Salary for 1BR
$104,000/yr
At 30% income rule
Salary for 2BR
$121,334/yr
At 30% income rule
Rental stress suburbs
434 / 608
71% of all suburbs

Top movers

Biggest rent changes vs previous quarter (January – March 2026)

Biggest decreases
No decreases recorded this quarter.

Most affordable suburbs

By lowest 1-bedroom weekly rent

1
Punchbowl
$288/wk
2
Bidwill
$350/wk
3
Blackett
$350/wk
4
Dharruk
$350/wk
5
Emerton
$350/wk
6
Hebersham
$350/wk
7
Mount Druitt
$350/wk
8
Shalvey
$350/wk
9
Whalan
$350/wk
10
Cabramatta
$360/wk

Least affordable suburbs

By highest 1-bedroom weekly rent

2
Queens Park
$900/wk
3
Chippendale
$865/wk
4
Eveleigh
$865/wk
5
Millers Point
$850/wk
6
Sydney
$850/wk
7
Chifley
$850/wk
8
La Perouse
$850/wk
9
Little Bay
$850/wk
10
Matraville
$850/wk

Affordability geography

Where affordability patterns cluster

The most affordable 1-bedroom options cluster in the south-west corridors — Punchbowl ($288/wk) and the outer-west pocket around Bidwill, Blackett and Dharruk (all $350/wk) — well below the city median. The eastern suburbs command the sharpest premium: Bondi Junction and Queens Park sit at $900/wk, and Chippendale and Eveleigh at $865/wk. Inner-west and harbour-adjacent suburbs form a consistent mid-tier band of $600–$750/wk.

The 30% rule in context

What income do these rents require?

1-Bedroom
$600/wk
Requires $104,000/yr at 30% rule
2-Bedroom
$700/wk
Requires $121,334/yr at 30% rule
3-Bedroom
$848/wk
Requires $146,987/yr at 30% rule

The 30% rule is a common benchmark: spending more than 30% of gross income on rent is considered rental stress. Figures above use the median rent per bedroom type across all 608 tracked suburbs in Sydney.

Methodology

Rent figures are derived from residential rental bond lodgement data published by state tenancy authorities and cross-referenced with ABS Census household income data. Medians are calculated across all bonds active within the quarter, grouped by bedroom count.

Read the full methodology →

Update schedule

This snapshot covers January – March 2026 bond data. It is a permanent archive — this page remains live as Q2 and later snapshots publish.

Next snapshot expected when Q2 2026 bond data publishes (~August 2026).

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