Renting in Australia has become more precarious as rents rise, rental vacancy rates fall, and tenants increasingly face no-grounds evictions and rent hike demands. Tenant advocacy services — providing free advice, dispute support, and representation — help renters understand and enforce their rights under tenancy law. These services are funded through a combination of government grants (from rental bond interest in most states) and philanthropic support. Understanding the tenancy advice landscape helps organisations, funders, and renters navigate an increasingly difficult private rental market.
The rental crisis
Who needs tenancy advice
What tenancy advisors do
State Rental Bond Boards / Bond Boards
Rental bond interest funds tenant advice services in most states:
- Tenants' Union of NSW
- Tenants Victoria
- Tenant Information and Advocacy Service (QLD)
- South Australian Shelter (SA)
State fair trading agencies
Some tenancy dispute services.
Legal Aid Commissions
Some coverage of tenancy matters (very limited).
Community foundations
Local tenancy advice programs.
Law foundations
Some tenancy legal advice support.
Housing advocacy organisations
Some cross-funded tenancy advice within broader housing advocacy.
Free tenant advice and information
Dispute support
Tribunal representation
Eviction prevention
Domestic violence and tenancy
Rooming house and share house
CALD community tenancy advice
Advocacy and policy
Rental bond disputes are the most common tenancy issue:
- Landlords withhold bonds for cleaning, damage, or alleged arrears
- Renters often don't know how to challenge unfair bond claims
- State tribunals provide a (largely accessible) forum but preparation matters
- Evidence (photos at move-in and move-out) is critical
Community education about bond documentation and dispute rights is high-value: it prevents disputes from escalating and empowers renters to claim their bond back.
Evidence-based need
Rental stress data — from ABS, Tenants' Union research, CoreLogic — demonstrates the scale of need. Applications that ground themselves in evidence of specific local or population need are more compelling.
Under-served populations
Some renter populations face particular barriers: CALD renters who don't know Australian tenancy law, people with disability who face access issues, Aboriginal renters in remote areas. Applications specifically targeting under-served groups are higher-priority.
Systemic advocacy
Individual tenancy advice is essential but limited. Applications that combine casework with systemic advocacy — for tenancy law reform, bond reform, rental supply — have greater long-term impact.
Prevention education
Most renters first encounter tenancy services in crisis. Applications that provide pre-emptive education — what to do at move-in, how to document, what notices mean — prevent problems escalating.
Tahua's grants management platform supports tenancy advice funders and renter advocacy organisations — with case tracking, dispute outcome measurement, renter reach data, and the reporting tools that help tenancy funders demonstrate their investment in fair treatment for Australian renters.