Victoria Eviction Process: A Rental Provider's Guide to Notices and VCAT
Complete guide to Victoria eviction procedures including 2025 reforms, notice to vacate requirements, VCAT hearings, and abolished no-fault evictions.
Juridisk ansvarsfraskrivelse
Dette indhold er udelukkende til generel information og uddannelsesmæssige formål. Det udgør ikke juridisk rådgivning og bør ikke betragtes som sådan. Love ændres ofte – verificer altid gældende regler og konsulter en autoriseret advokat i din jurisdiktion for rådgivning specifikt til din situation. Landager er en ejendomsadministrationsplatform, ikke et advokatfirma.Oplysninger sidst verificeret: April 2026.
Navigating the Grounds-Based Eviction Framework in Victoria
The Victorian residential rental market operates under a strictly grounds-based system following the landmark 2021 reforms to the Residential Tenancies Act 1997. Rental providers (landlords) no longer have the discretionary power to end a tenancy "without grounds" at the conclusion of a fixed term or during a periodic agreement. Any attempt to terminate a tenancy must cite a valid, legally prescribed reason and be supported by required evidence to be enforceable at the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT).
The Requirement for Valid Grounds
Under the Residential Tenancies Act 1997, a Notice to Vacate is only enforceable if it cites one of the following "non-fault" or "fault-based" reasons:
- Owner Occupation: The rental provider or their immediate family intends to move into the property for at least 12 months.
- Sale of Property: A contract of sale has been exchanged requiring vacant possession, or the property is being prepared for sale (subject to strict 90-day notice).
- Major Renovations or Demolition: The property requires vacant possession for significant structural works or demolition (requires building permits as evidence).
- Change of Use: The premises are being converted to a commercial use or another non-residential purpose.
Termination for Non-Payment: The "Five Strikes" Rule
Victoria maintains a unique "Five Strikes" policy regarding rent arrears. A rental provider may issue a 14-day Notice to Vacate once the renter is at least 14 days in arrears.
- The First Four Occurrences: If the renter pays the full amount owing before the termination date specified in the notice, the notice is cancelled. This "right to remedy" applies to the first four notices issued within a 12-month period.
- The Fifth Occurrence: On the fifth instance of 14-day arrears within a 12-month period, the rental provider can apply to VCAT for a possession order regardless of whether the renter subsequently pays the debt.
Notice Periods and Service Requirements
Notice periods vary significantly depending on the grounds cited:
- 90 Days: Standard for owner-occupation, sale, or major renovations.
- 14 Days: For rent arrears (once 14 days late) or general breach of duty.
- Immediate: For serious damage to the property or danger to neighbours.
Service of Notice: Precision is critical. When serving via post, you must allow for the "standard delivery time" as defined by Australia Post (typically 7 business days). Failure to add these days to the notice period is one of the most common reasons VCAT dismisses possession applications.
VCAT Possession Orders and Warrants
If a renter refuses to vacate by the date specified in a valid notice, the rental provider must apply to VCAT for a Possession Order.
- Possession Order: VCAT determines if the notice is valid and the grounds are genuine. If granted, the order specifies a date for the renter to vacate.
- Warrant of Possession: If the renter still does not leave, the rental provider must purchase a Warrant of Possession.
- Police Execution: Only the Victoria Police have the legal authority to execute a warrant and physically remove a renter. Self-help evictions—changing locks or cutting utilities—carry severe criminal penalties and heavy fines.
Compliance and Evidence Retention
To defend a Notice to Vacate at VCAT, rental providers should maintain:
- Evidence of Grounds: E.g., a signed contract of sale, building permits for renovations, or a statutory declaration for owner-occupation.
- Proof of Service: Registered post receipts or confirmation of email delivery (if consented).
- Communication Logs: A detailed history of all interactions regarding arrears or breaches.
Data-Driven Compliance Summary
The following quick facts are derived from the primary governing legislation for victoria.
Residential Eviction Process in victoria
Identify Valid Ground
Confirm a legally prescribed reason for ending the tenancy (e.g., sale, renovation, move-in by owner).
Issue Appropriate Notice
Serve the correct notice with the required period (14 days for non-payment up to 270 days for other grounds).
Wait for Notice Period
Allow the notice period to expire; the tenant may dispute through VCAT during this time.
Apply to VCAT if Needed
If the tenant doesn’t vacate, apply to VCAT for a possession order.
Automated Compliance with Landager
Landager's platform is designed to operationalize the legal requirements mentioned above. By automating notice periods, rent increase tracking, and documentation storage, we ensure that landlords in victoria stay within the letter of the law without manual oversight.
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