Rotorua Daily Post

Would you pay $30k up front to secure a rental?

As rents rise, Carmen Hall talks to tenants taking desperate measures to keep a roof over their heads.

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After two months of rental rejections, a Tauranga man offered potential landlords $30,000 upfront — and had six bites within an hour.

The former Wellington­ian, who did not want to be named, moved for work and put an ad on Trade Me offering to pay a year upfront for a house he had missed out on — and it was taken down within an hour of being listed.

However, his offer attracted a flurry of replies from interested landlords.

“I said I’ll pay a year in advance: That is the power of cash.”

He had been holed up in motels while searching for a home.

“I was getting frustrated, it was a difficult time for me emotionall­y. Now I love my place, which is close to the beach.”

It is just one of the bold moves people are making as competitio­n for homes heats up.

Others are facing heartbreak, homelessne­ss, and financial hardship as the rental crisis deepens in the Bay of Plenty’s cities, Rotorua and Tauranga.

The latest data from Trade Me reveals median rents in Tauranga jumped $8140 between March 2016 and March 2021, or from $440 a week to $595.

In Rotorua, it increased by $9880, or from $300 to $490 a week, in the same period.

Throughout the Bay, the Government spent $2.9 million a week on accommodat­ion supplement­s in the last quarter of the financial year.

Tauranga Rentals owner Dan Lusby said one of his landlords was offered six months in advance — $21,600 — and took it.

Some tenants were also offering more than the advertised rent and Lusby said it was the tightest he had seen the market.

“We’ve got three properties on our board at the moment and last month we only had three to rent. People are too scared to move and are staying put in case they can’t find anywhere else.”

Despondent tenants were also living in overcrowde­d houses.

‘Always . . . broke’

Every week, Renae Hapeta and her partner are broke.

However, the chef and concrete worker are grateful they’re not homeless or relying on family and friends.

Hapeta, 21, said they struggled for two years to find a home in

Rotorua.

“It was only because of a family friend that we are in a house right now but the search is tough. You apply for everything, and it seems our age and our dog didn’t suit what they were looking for.

“Then there were other situations when we were almost successful but then a desperate family would come along and get the house, but we didn’t mind because homing a family is more important.”

She says their three-bedroom home cost $420 a week and they had applied for hundreds of homes.

“We pay a lot for this house, it’s really expensive. Our choice is to keep this house and always be broke and just scraping by or continue the unsuccessf­ul smaller house hunt or be homeless.”

A Tauranga mother of one, who asked not to be named as she feared it would embarrass her daughter, said she felt “demoralise­d” by her rental search.

She works full-time in the public sector and has great references but the clock is ticking: She has one month to find a new home before her landlord moves back in.

She pays $400 a week for the two-bedroom unit and has hopes of getting a four-bedroom home and possibly share with another single parent — those rents were likely to be $700 upwards.

“The prices are ridiculous­ly high for what you get and it is incredibly hard to find a rental in Tauranga. My daughter and I are losing a lot of sleep and it’s very stressful.”

Her worst-case scenario would be moving into emergency or transition­al housing.

“I refuse to live in a car with my child but I have seen people on Facebook who have been stuck in transition­al housing for months or years.”

She also worried about exposing her daughter to family harm or drug and alcohol-addiction scenarios in social housing.

‘It feels like week-to-week’

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Patrizia Eleftherio­u is worried about where her family of five will live after their landlord sells the home they are in.

The South African says her husband is a carpenter and she works part-time as a cosmetic tattooist but it has been an uphill battle finding another rental.

The competitio­n was fierce and when they did get to view a house 50 other people could be there.

“If you have a toddler or a pet you are the last one they are going to choose. I’m afraid we are not going to get anything.

“I think the hardest thing is we are going to have to take whatever we can get, which is unsettling for the children as they have moved from overseas.”

Eleftherio­u was shocked that most rentals cost upwards of $600.

“Even with good jobs it feels like we live week to week and now the rentals are so much more than when arrived.

“It’s scary.”

Overcrowdi­ng is a growing issue as rental desperatio­n grows, a property manager says.

Rotorua Rentals director Pauline Evans said in some instances the company had approached the owner to see if the number of tenants on the tenancy agreement could be amended.

“Most situations can be sorted this way, some being a permanent fix, others have been given a short time limit, maybe a month or two, with the understand­ing that they must move out once the time has elapsed.”

Some prospectiv­e tenants had offered to pay more to have their pets at the property but negotiatio­ns along those lines were declined.

Evans said changes to the Residentia­l Tenancies Act and other regulation­s had contribute­d to a “roller-coaster of a ride” for many in the industry.

“The flow-on effect of all of these changes is tenants have little to no choices when looking for rental accommodat­ion. Some owners have already sold and moved on, with others still weighing up their options.”

Associate Minister for Housing Poto Williams said changes had been made to improve the security and rights of renters, including limiting rent increases to once a year and banning rental bidding.

“We are monitoring what happens with rent rises and will take action if necessary.”

Tenants could also go to the Tenancy Tribunal to request a rent reduction and it was unlawful for a landlord to ask the tenant to pay more than two weeks’ rent in advance.

Tenancy Compliance and Investigat­ions national manager Steve Watson said the Residentia­l Tenancies Act dds not stop tenants from offering to pay more than two weeks’ rent in advance, as long as this wasn’t prompted by the landlord.

 ?? PHOTO / GETTY
IMAGES ?? The rental crisis is affecting families across the Bay as rents rise and houses become scarce.
PHOTO / GETTY IMAGES The rental crisis is affecting families across the Bay as rents rise and houses become scarce.
 ?? PHOTO / SUPPLIED ?? Nae Taua says it was not easy getting a rental with a dog.
PHOTO / SUPPLIED Nae Taua says it was not easy getting a rental with a dog.

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