Queensland Lease Agreements: Form 18a Requirements

A landlord's guide to the mandatory General Tenancy Agreement (Form 18a) in Queensland, covering standard terms, permissible special clauses, and RTRA laws.

Melvin Prince
6 min de lecture
Hitelesített Apr 2026Australie flag
Contrat de bailQueenslandRTAFormular-18aConformité

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Unlike landlords in the United States who frequently draft bespoke leases from scratch, Queensland landlords are bound to a highly standardized framework. The Residential Tenancies and Rooming Accommodation Act 2008 (RTRA Act) dictates not just what must be in a lease, but the exact physical form that must be used.

The Mandatory Form 18a

To legally rent a general residential dwelling (a house, apartment, or townhouse) in Queensland, a landlord must use the official General Tenancy Agreement (Form 18a) provided by the Residential Tenancies Authority (RTA).

You cannot simply write your own tenancy agreement in a Word document. Using an unapproved tenancy agreement is an offense under Queensland law.

Standard Terms The

Form 18a consists of over 40 standard legislative terms that cover the foundational rights and responsibilities of both parties regarding:

  • Rent payment methods and schedules.
  • Bond lodgement and return.
  • General maintenance and the physical condition of the premises.
  • Right of entry and notice periods.
  • The process for terminating the lease.

Neither the landlord nor the tenant can alter, strike out, or negotiate away the standard terms. Any attempt to contract out of the RTRA Act via a "gentleman's agreement" or written addendum is entirely void and unenforceable in the Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal (QCAT).

Adding "Special Terms"

While you cannot alter the standard terms, Queensland landlords are permitted to append Special Terms to the Form 18a, provided these terms do not conflict with the RTRA Act.

Common, legally permissible Special Terms include:

  • Pet Clauses: Permitting specific pets but stipulating the tenant must professionally clean the carpets or treat the property for fleas upon vacating. (Note: You still cannot charge a "pet bond.")
  • Pool Maintenance: Dictating whether the landlord or the tenant is responsible for providing pool chemicals and performing regular scooping/cleaning.
  • Yard Maintenance: Specifying that the tenant is responsible for mowing the lawns, weeding gardens, and trimming hedges up to a certain height.
  • Water Consumption Clauses: If the property meets specific water efficiency criteria and is individually metered, a special term can require the tenant to pay for their full state water consumption.
  • Smoking Restrictions: Explicitly prohibiting smoking combustible forms of tobacco or vaping inside the dwelling unit, or on the apartment balcony.

Prohibited Special Terms

A special term is invalid if it violates the RTRA Act. You cannot include a special term that:

  • Requires the tenant to use a specific, nominated cleaning company at the end of their lease. (The tenant only has to return the property to the same level of cleanliness as when they moved in; they can do this themselves).
  • Forces the tenant to pay for general wear and tear maintenance (like replacing an aged water heater).
  • Permits the landlord to charge late fees or penalty interest for overdue rent.
  • Requires the tenant to waive their right to a 24-hour entry notice for routine inspections.

Fixed vs. Periodic Agreements

The Form 18a supports two distinct types of tenancies:

  1. Fixed-term agreement: The tenant agrees to rent the property for a specified period (e.g., 6 months, 12 months). The landlord cannot end the lease early unless the tenant breaches the agreement. Furthermore, rent cannot be increased during this term unless specifically written into the special terms.
  2. Periodic agreement: Often called a "month-to-month" lease. It has a start date but no end date. Important Note: Due to recent QLD legislative reforms, landlords can no longer end a periodic agreement "without grounds." You must have a prescribed legal reason (e.g., significant renovations, selling the property) to issue a Notice to Leave on a periodic lease.

Streamlining Lease Generation

Relying on physical Form 18a printouts or filling out static PDFs often leads to human error—like forgetting to append the separate Water Consumption Special Term. Landager digitally generates legally binding, RTA-compliant General Tenancy Agreements. It seamlessly injects your custom (but compliant) special terms into the digital signature packet alongside the mandatory Pocket Guides, ensuring 100% compliance before the tenant even receives the keys.

Back to Queensland Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

2024 Legislative Reform Spotlight: Queensland

The Queensland rental landscape underwent its most significant transformation in a decade throughout 2024. The Residential Tenancies and Rooming Accommodation and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2024 was introduced to rebalance the power dynamic between lessors and tenants in a tight rental market.

The 12-Month Rent Increase "Property Anchor"

Perhaps the most impactful change is the 12-month rent increase "Property Anchor." Section 93 ties the 12-month limit to the physical dwelling. If you purchase a property where rent was increased by a prior owner 4 months ago, you cannot increase it for another 8 months—even for a new tenant. This mandates rigorous due diligence during any real estate acquisition to obtain a clear ledger of previous rent increases.

Minimum Housing and Fee-Free Rent

Also, exemptions for high-value properties regarding bond caps were removed. All residential bonds are now strictly capped at 4 weeks' rent, removing exceptions for properties over $700 per week. Lessors must now offer at least one fee-free method to pay rent to protect tenants from hidden transaction costs or third-party portal fees. Lastly, strict minimum housing standards now actively mandate properties must be weatherproof, structurally sound, free of vermin, damp, and mold, and possess functioning privacy locks on all external entryways prior to the commencement of any tenancy.

Routine Inspections and Maintenance

To further protect tenant quiet enjoyment, routine inspections are strictly capped and notice periods have clear statutory minimums. Landlords and their property managers must act transparently when executing entry notices, documenting visual damage clearly without violating the tenant’s right to home privacy. Retaliatory evictions are closely monitored, and any attempts to terminate an agreement shortly after a tenant requests emergency repairs will be heavily scrutinized by the Residential Tenancies Authority (RTA) and QCAT.

How Landager Helps

Navigating Queensland’s strict regulatory environment—particularly the 2024 RTRA Act amendments linking rent increases to the property—requires precision. Landager's platform automates compliance for QLD landlords by tracking 12-month rent lock periods, generating perfectly timed Form 11 and Form 12 notices, and ensuring bond lodgments adhere to the new 4-week unified cap. Keep your portfolio legally pristine with integrated RTA guidance.

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