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Balcony advertised at $360 a week in exposes reality of rental crisis

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By Tess Mccracken For Nca Newswire and Olivia Day For Daily Mail Australia

05:23 05 Jul 2024, updated 05:23 05 Jul 2024



A Sydney landlord has advertised an enclosed balcony for rent at $360 a week as the dire state of Australia’s rental crisis is laid bare.

The listing on Facebook Marketplace describes the balcony in Haymarket, in Sydney’s inner suburbs, as a ‘sunny room’ fit to accommodate one person.

Images show the tiny, box-like room decked out with a single bed, a mirror, blinds and a rug over what is likely tiled flooring.

Glass sliding doors connecting the balcony to the rest of the property are shown in the advert and the reflection in a full-length mirror shows an adjacent glass wall.

The landlord said the room was ready for a prospective tenant to ‘move in now’, and the weekly rent ‘included bills’.

The balcony is attached to a two-bedroom apartment.

A similar listing for a one-bedroom apartment went viral this week after a prospective tenant discovered the dining room and kitchen in the $390-a-week rental were in a covered outdoor area.

Photos from the bizarre listing show a fridge, cupboard, cooktop, food storage areas, a dining table and benches under tarps.

A balcony in Haymarket, in inner Sydney, has been listed to rent for $360 a week on Facebook
Pictured is the outside of the building in Haymarket, in the centre of Sydney’s CBD
The listing describes the balcony as a ‘sunny room’ fit to accommodate one person

The ‘wild’ living arrangement’ looked to be tacked onto someone’s four-bedroom house’, according to the would-be renter.

‘It looks the owner took the master bedroom of a house and just threw the kitchen and dining outside on the patio,’ he said. 

The rising cost of living and worsening rental crisis in Australia has seen a rise in dodgy rental listings that would ordinarily struggle to attract tenants. 

New data from Domain reveals that Sydney’s median price for rental houses stayed at a record $750 in June 2024, a 7.1 per cent jump from the same time last year.

A listing for a one-bedroom apartment went viral this week after a prospective tenant discovered the dining room and kitchen in the $390-a-week rental were outdoors

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