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Sharehouse Hunting — Platforms, Strategies, and Fair Pricing

Finding a sharehouse is a rite of passage for Australian international students. Here’s where to look, how to spot fair pricing, red flags, and strategies to secure accommodation without overpaying or being scammed.

Major Sharehouse Hunting Platforms

1. Domain.com.au

What it is: Australia’s largest real estate portal (rentals and sales).

Sharehouse listings:

Pros:

Cons:

Cost: Free to browse; premium filters available.

Link: https://www.domain.com.au


2. realestate.com.au

What it is: Second-largest real estate portal; similar to Domain.

Sharehouse listings:

Pros:

Cons:

Cost: Free.

Link: https://www.realestate.com.au


3. Flatmates.com.au

What it is: Specialised flatshare platform (human-powered, not agent-driven).

Sharehouse listings:

Pros:

Cons:

Cost: Free to browse; premium features (bump, highlight, email alerts) are paid.

Link: https://www.flatmates.com.au


4. Facebook Groups

What it is: Local community and international student groups where renters/landlords post directly.

Popular groups:

Pros:

Cons:

Cost: Free.

Strategy: Join groups 1–2 months before your planned move. Set alerts for new posts. Verify landlord’s profile (older account, local friends, recent posts).


5. Gumtree

What it is: Classifieds platform (older, but still active). Less polished than Domain/realestate.

Sharehouse listings:

Pros:

Cons:

Cost: Free to browse; paid listings for landlords cost extra.

Link: https://www.gumtree.com.au


6. Local University Housing Portals

Many universities run internal housing boards:

Pros:

Cons:


Fair Sharehouse Pricing by City and Suburb

Before you negotiate, research comparable prices.

Sydney Fair Rent Ranges (April 2026)

SuburbDistance to CBDFair Weekly Rent (Shared Room)
Inner West5–8 km
Newtown7 kmA$380–$450
Marrickville8 kmA$350–$420
Glebe5 kmA$420–$500
Redfern3 kmA$420–$480
Inner South
Paddington4 kmA$450–$520
Surry Hills3 kmA$450–$520
Clovelly5 kmA$400–$470
Outer North
Chatswood12 kmA$350–$420
Parramatta23 kmA$280–$350
Penrith55 kmA$220–$300

How to use this: If a Newtown listing is A$380/week, that’s fair-to-good. If it’s A$480/week for a shared room, negotiate or keep looking.

Melbourne Fair Rent Ranges

SuburbDistanceFair Weekly Rent (Shared Room)
Collingwood3 kmA$300–$370
Fitzroy3 kmA$300–$370
Brunswick5 kmA$280–$350
Yarraville6 kmA$280–$340
Caulfield12 kmA$300–$380

Brisbane Fair Rent Ranges

SuburbDistanceFair Weekly Rent (Shared Room)
South Bank2 kmA$280–$350
Newstead3 kmA$250–$320
Paddington5 kmA$240–$310

How to Search Effectively

Step 1: Set Your Criteria

Step 2: Search Multiple Platforms

Step 3: Save Comparables

Create a spreadsheet:

AddressSuburbWeekly RentRoom TypeFurnishedWiFiAdmin Notes
123 Main StNewtownA$400SharedYesIncluded15 min to UNSW, good vibe
45 Elm AveMarrickvilleA$380SharedPartlyNot included30 min to UTS, quiet

This helps you spot fair pricing.

Step 4: Contact Early

Step 5: Request Viewings


What Makes a Fair Sharehouse Price?

Fair prices account for:

  1. Commute time: A 10-minute walk to uni = premium (A$50–$100/week more). A 50-minute bus = discount (A$50–$100/week less).
  2. Room size: Large private room = A$50–$150/week more than small shared room.
  3. Furnished: Unfurnished is A$20–$50/week cheaper.
  4. Utilities included: WiFi/utilities included = A$30–$50/week premium.
  5. Amenities: Off-street parking, outdoor space, modern appliances = premium.
  6. Housemate quality: Quiet, clean, professional housemates = premium (hard to quantify).
  7. Location hype: Trendy suburbs (Newtown, Fitzroy, Collingwood) = A$50–$150/week premium vs similar suburbs 2 km away.

Red flag pricing:


Red Flags and Scams

Scam 1: “Advance Rent” Before Viewing

What happens: Landlord asks you to transfer A$500–$1,000 before you’ve viewed the property or signed anything.

Reality: Legitimate landlords don’t ask for money upfront. You’ve never even seen the place.

Avoid: Always view (in person or detailed video) before paying anything.

Scam 2: Duplicate Listings (Bait and Switch)

What happens: Same photo appears on multiple ads at different prices. Landlord “doesn’t remember” the listing or tries to redirect you to a nearby, inferior property.

Avoid: Reverse image search photos (Google Images). Check if the address matches the posting.

Scam 3: Overseas Landlord

What happens: Landlord is overseas, can’t meet you, wants you to pay bond before arrival. Property doesn’t exist.

Avoid: Only deal with local landlords or agents. Verify phone numbers and addresses independently.

Scam 4: Bond + Rent + “Admin Fee”

What happens: Landlord asks for bond (A$1,600) + first week’s rent (A$400) + A$300 “admin fee” (totally illegal).

Reality: You should only pay bond + first week’s rent. Admin fees are not standard.

Avoid: Verify all fees with state tenancy authority before paying.

Scam 5: Furnished but Evict You Later

What happens: Landlord sells the property 2 months later; new owner evicts you immediately.

Reality: This is rare but possible. Ensure your lease protects you; check landlord’s ownership status independently.


Meeting Housemates: Questions to Ask

Before You Move In:

  1. How long have you lived here?
  2. Why is the current room becoming available?
  3. What’s the cleaning roster?
  4. How do you split utilities (equally or by usage)?
  5. What are the quiet hours?
  6. Do you often have guests/partners over?
  7. How do you handle house conflicts?
  8. What’s the internet speed and data limit?
  9. Any house rules I should know?

Red flag housemates:


Negotiating Your Rent

You have limited leverage, but:

  1. Longer commitment: Offer to sign 12 months instead of 6. Landlord may drop A$10–$30/week.
  2. Upfront payment: Offer to pay the first month upfront. May secure the room.
  3. Bulk room: If you’re renting for a group of friends, negotiate a discount (e.g., 10% off for 2+ rooms).
  4. Timing: Move-in during off-peak (winter, mid-semester) = more negotiation room. Peak (summer, orientation) = no leverage.

Realistic negotiations: A$10–$50/week discount, rarely more.


After You Secure a Room: Next Steps

  1. Written Lease: Get a formal tenancy agreement. Don’t rely on verbal agreements.
  2. Bond: Pay bond to landlord or agent. Request lodgement confirmation with state authority.
  3. Condition Report: Before you move in, walk through and document the property’s current state. Take photos.
  4. Utilities Agreement: Settle how utilities are split and who’s responsible for bills.
  5. House Rules: Document in writing (cleaning, guests, parking, quiet hours).

FAQ

Q: What’s a realistic time frame to find a sharehouse? A: 2–4 weeks if searching from overseas (virtual tours). 3–7 days if you’re in Australia and can view in person. Peak season (orientation, summer) may require longer searches.

Q: Should I sign a lease I haven’t seen in person? A: Only if the landlord is verified and reputable. Request a video tour. Never pay full bond + rent remotely; wait until you arrive and can inspect.

Q: Can I break my lease if I hate my housemates? A: Only with 30–90 days’ written notice (state-dependent). You’ll lose some/all of your bond if you break early. Housemate conflict is rarely a valid legal reason to exit.

Q: What if the landlord doesn’t return my bond? A: Contact your state’s tenancy authority (RTA, RBB, etc.). They can force the landlord to return it. Keep all documentation: lease, bond receipt, move-out photos, condition report.

Q: Is it better to rent through an agent or directly from a landlord? A: Directly from landlord is usually cheaper. Agents offer more legal protection. Both are legitimate; choose based on price vs. comfort level.

Q: Can I negotiate utilities into the rent? A: Yes, some landlords include internet and utilities for a flat fee (A$30–$50/week). This eliminates disputes but may be pricier overall.

Q: What’s the safest platform to avoid scams? A: Domain, realestate.com.au, and university portals are safer. Facebook and Gumtree require more due diligence. Flatmates is mid-range.

Q: Should I pay bond in cash or bank transfer? A: Always bank transfer (leaves a record). Cash payments are unverifiable and risky. Insist on a receipt and lodgement confirmation.

Sources

Last reviewed: April 2026. Cost figures move with inflation — verify with the linked source if you’re budgeting precisely.


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