Renters are choosing to keep renting - even after buying a home

Apr 21, 2026

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One of Australia’s biggest banks is seeing a surge in renters choosing to rent even when they buy a home, a hack that’s changing the game for people locked out of property markets. Nicole Butler, NAB’s local home loan expert, shares why more of her customers are buying homes in one suburb while continuing to rent in another.

By Nicole Butler, NAB local home loan expert

If you’ve been following property news over the past year or so, you’ve probably heard the term “rent-vesting” come up more often. So, what does it mean, and why are more people talking about it?

I was recently speaking with a customer looking to buy their first home, an investment property. At the time, they were renting close to the city. Cafes downstairs, a short commute to work, friends nearby. Buying in that area wasn’t realistic for where they were in life. So instead, they bought their first home in a more affordable location and rented it out, while continuing to rent where they were living.

Put simply, rentvesting is when someone buys a property as an investment, usually in a more affordable area, while continuing to rent in a location that better suits their work or lifestyle.

In practice, that often means renting closer to the city or work, while buying in a suburb or region where prices are lower and rental demand is strong. The rent from the investment property helps offset the mortgage, while the buyer keeps flexibility over where they live day to day.

It’s not a new idea, but it’s getting more attention as buying in many inner-city and lifestyle suburbs becomes harder, especially for first-home buyers.

Why do it?

For some buyers, rentvesting is a way to get on the property ladder.

Buying in a more affordable area may allow people to achieve the dream of home ownership sooner, rather than waiting to save a larger deposit for a home in a higher priced suburb

Others are drawn to the flexibility. It allows people to rent where the lifestyle suits them, while investing in a property with strong rental demand or capital growth potential.

It’s also worth remembering that buying an investment property is a different financial commitment to buying a home you live in. Loan terms, repayments and ongoing costs can vary, and an investment decision is usually more about long-term affordability than emotional attachment. That makes careful budgeting especially important.

 

Does rent-vesting work for you?

Whether rent-vesting makes sense really comes down to personal circumstances, and whether the numbers stack up for your situation.

Buying an investment property means thinking beyond the purchase price. There are upfront and ongoing costs to consider, including stamp duty, landlord insurance, maintenance and property management fees. Rental income won’t always cover every expense.

Vacancies are another reality. A property may not be tenanted every week of the year, and rental income is central to how rent-vesting works. Vacancies, rising costs or unexpected repairs can affect cash flow, so it’s important to allow for those ups and downs.

You should also look beyond the first year or two. Interest rates, rents and personal circumstances change over time, and thinking ahead about how repayments would be managed if costs rise or income shifts can ease pressure later on. There are trade-offs as well, including missing out on first homebuyer benefits that apply to owner-occupied properties and the potential for capital gains tax when an investment property is sold.

Ultimately, it comes down to how the strategy works, what it really costs, and whether it supports both your financial position and your lifestyle, now and over the longer term.

 

Source: https://www.realestate.com

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