All Topics / General Property / determining a market for rentals

Viewing 3 posts - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)
  • Profile photo of voigtstrvoigtstr
    Member
    @voigtstr
    Join Date: 2005
    Post Count: 176

    How do you determine if an area that you might be interested in investing in, has a market for rental properties?

    Are real estate agents going to lie to you about rental prospects if they think you might buy an investment property of their books?

    When doing a search via online real estates I if there are only a few rentals does that mean there is no demand, or that there is demand and all the properties have been rented out?

    Sorry for the dumb questions, just finding it hard to get the research started.

    Also how small in population would an area be to be too small to invest in..even if it was showing some growth…(about 2%)

    Profile photo of MichaelYardneyMichaelYardney
    Participant
    @michaelyardney
    Join Date: 2001
    Post Count: 616

    Estate agents wouldn’t lie to you would they[biggrin] but they may be a little over enthusiastic.

    We see this all the time with investors “promised” unrealistic rentals and when the proeprties don’t lease out at that rent, the agent explains how the market is slow at present.

    Ask a different agent in the area what the rent would be if you brought a property across to them to manange.

    The best source of current market rentals is looking up rentals on the web portals such as realestate.com.au That’s exactly what tenants do and they are very aware of what rentals should be.

    The fact that there are only a few properties for rent could mean that there is no demand as you say or it could mean the opposite – all the properties have leased quickly.

    From the tone of your post it suggests that you are looking in a small town and this can be a real problem as rental demand can be very low in these towns and properties can remain vacant for a long time.

    Have a look at the internet ad and see if there is a date when the property became available for rent or ask the agent how long the property has been vacant, then keep a track of the ads and see how long they take to lease.

    Michael Yardney
    METROPOLE PROPERTIES
    Author of Australia’s leading property e-magazine.
    Join over 10,000 readers each month.
    FREE subscription http://www.metropole.com.au

    Profile photo of XeniaXenia
    Member
    @xenia
    Join Date: 2002
    Post Count: 1,231

    you can also pull reports from RP data or upmarket or similar programs which allows you to do demographic reports including data on proportion of population that is renting in an area vs owner occupiers.

    To determine what price it would rent for, ring agents, say that you are a tenant and ask to see what they have on their books for you to rent. Check out also the local paper for private
    rentals.

    Cheers

    Xenia

    We buy properties in all conditions. Can offer Immediate Cash Settlements, No Real Estate Agents Required
    [email protected]
    phone 0412 437 582

Viewing 3 posts - 1 through 3 (of 3 total)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic. If you don't have an account, you can register here.