News In BriefAccomProperties NewsNewsManagement RightsShort Term Rental Industry

ASTRA joins debate over short stays and housing supply

ASTRA chair Yoav Tourel says the short-term rental debate is an important one, responding to Trevor Rawnsley’s recent AccomNews article with a call for balanced, state-based regulation

Australia and New Zealand Short Term Rental Association (ASTRA) chair Yoav Tourel has weighed in on the debate over short-term rental accommodation and housing supply, following a recent AccomNews article by Australian Resident Accommodation Managers Association (ARAMA) CEO Trevor Rawnsley calling for councils to ban short-term letting in detached suburban homes.

While Rawnsley argued that Class 1 houses should remain in the long-term housing pool, Tourel said the policy discussion should also recognise the varied and often changing ways residential property is used in practice.

Read: Change tenancy laws to ease housing crisis

Tourel said short-term rental accommodation (STRA) reflects the reality that homes are not always used in a single, fixed way. A property may at different times serve as a primary residence, a holiday home, a temporary base for work or family reasons, or an income-producing asset that helps a household manage mortgage costs, rising living expenses or retirement planning.

“This flexibility is not a flaw, it is a feature of a functioning housing and accommodation system, and it should be recognised as such,” he said.

Importantly, Tourel pointed out that the role of STRA extends beyond leisure travel. In regional and growth areas in particular, it can provide practical accommodation for tradespeople, teachers, healthcare workers, contractors and project teams who need somewhere to stay for weeks or months, especially where dedicated medium-term accommodation is limited or does not exist.

In many locations, he said, alternative medium-term accommodation “simply does not exist”.

At the same time, Tourel made clear that flexibility should not mean a lack of oversight. In his view, the sector benefits from “clarity, consistency and appropriate regulation”, with an important distinction between professionally managed properties and more occasional hosts.

Where a property is managed on behalf of others, this should continue to sit within existing licensing frameworks under state-based consumer and fair trading laws. For other hosts, he pointed to lighter-touch tools such as registration, certification or accreditation as ways to improve transparency, minimum standards and understanding of who is operating in the sector and at what level.

Tourel also argued for a more coherent state-based approach to STRA, including registration, data and enforceable codes of conduct, stating that ”governments first need to understand the sector through data to enable evidence based policy decisions”.

That marks a different policy emphasis from Rawnsley’s article, which centred on restricting detached suburban homes from short-stay use in order to improve long-term rental supply. Rawnsley also argued that strata apartments are better suited to move between short-stay and long-stay use depending on demand.

Tourel said it was also important to be precise about the role of residential property. Residential dwellings, he argued, are designed to accommodate people and may, over time, be owner-occupied, rented long-term or used more flexibly to meet changing household and community needs.

That flexibility, he said, is a fundamental characteristic of residential property and should not be undermined by broad or poorly targeted policy responses.

Where issues do arise, they should be addressed through proportionate, evidence-based measures rather than blanket restrictions that fail to recognise how housing is actually used in practice.

While the two perspectives differ on where limits should apply, the exchange highlights an increasingly important policy question: how to balance housing supply pressures with the varied ways residential property is used by owners, workers, visitors and communities.

Tourel said the debate was worth having if it helped reinforce a more balanced and practical policy framework, one that recognises the diversity of the sector, supports professionalism and preserves the flexibility that communities, workers and households increasingly rely on.

Read the latest edition of AccomNews HERE

Mandy Clarke

Mandy Clarke has over two decades of experience writing about the accommodation and tourism industries and is an accomplished editor. She is the long-time former editor of AccomNews and the current editor of Resort News, two leading publications serving Australia and New Zealand's accommodation sector.

She previously spent almost 20 years as co-director of Multimedia Pty Ltd, helping shape the company into a trusted B2B content provider for the accommodation and education sectors in Australia and New Zealand. During this time, she oversaw high-quality print and digital content for key publications including AccomNews, Resort News, School News, and the property listing platform AccomProperties.

Her contributions to the industry have been recognised with the Female Leader Award at the Best of Tourism 2023 and the ARAMA Life Member Award in 2024.

Leave a comment for the community...

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button
WP Tumblr Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com