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Airbnb: How to stop Airbnb in your strata building

how to stop airbnb in your building

This article is about how to stop Airbnb in your strata building.

Airbnb and other short-term letting sites have taken Australia by storm. Unfortunately, these rentals often negatively affect the neighbourhood around them.

How to stop airbnb in your building

This is particularly true if the listing is in an apartment block. While it’s often the impact on the quality of life that residents complain about – people coming and going all the time are hardly good for creating a community feeling, even if they’re not having loud parties – short-term rentals can also expose residents to problems like:

We’ve found that 5% of units in most buildings in high-demand areas are listed on short-term rentals sites. Often it’s much higher – the most we’ve found is 40%. The most popular areas are those close to tourist attractions and to universities, but increasingly we find unwanted short-term rentals throughout major cities and in the countryside.

Strata buildings in Australia often don’t have a lot of options to push back against unwanted sublets. This sometimes makes it difficult to find out how to stop Airbnb in your building. Unless the state has passed clear legislation (eg WA blocks it without council consent, while SA allows it), most battles with owners will end in the courts or tribunals. In Victoria and NSW, so far these have supported the owners.

Still, strata buildings have a few options to control short-term letting. So, find out how to stop Airbnb in your building:

  1. Report them

    In most states, short-term letting rules are defined and enforced by local councils. Councils don’t like it when a unit zoned residentially is used commercially, and usually, the host doesn’t bother getting the correct permissions.

    One word of warning, however – while anyone can report an infraction, it’s up to local councils to enforce these rules, which they do to varying degrees with their often stretched resources.

    You can also threaten to report activity to the ATO. It isn’t clear yet how often host income isn’t reported and taxed in Australia, but it’d be very easy not to, and the ATO is taking a special interest in it. There are also capital gains implications for using a property commercially which the ATO will be keen to enforce.

    If a tenant is listing the unit online you can report them to the unit’s owner or property manager. They’re very unlikely to have permission and so are probably breaking their lease and will stop quickly rather than face eviction.

  2. Pass bylaws

    The rules, precedents and best approaches vary by state and, unfortunately, often local council as well. It’s best to get legal advice on whether a strata bylaw will work for your situation. But a common strategy used by strata buildings is to pass bylaws saying all residents must follow local council regulations. This allows them to take action when an owner flouts commercial-use restrictions in their building, without having to rely on councils to enforce them.

  3. Get help

    You’re not alone with this problem. Encourage your residents to report any suspicious behaviour they see. Most don’t want holiday rentals next door and will be keen to report any strangers coming and going with luggage, or rules infractions these strangers do.

    You can also use a cost-effective monitoring service like BnbGuard. Our advanced technology monitors more than a dozen sites for you, reporting any online ads for units in your building. We also stay on top of new sites that spring up – and there are more every day – to make sure you know what’s going on in your building.

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This post appears in Strata News #184.

Read Next:

Reuben Schwarz BnbGuard E: reuben@bnbguard.com.au

Visit Strata Noisy Neighbours, Renting / Selling / Buying Strata Property OR Strata Information Pages by State.

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