Required Disclosures for Queensland Residential Landlords
Required Disclosures compliance guide for Queensland, Australia. Covers landlord-tenant regulations, requirements, and legal obligations.
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To ensure transparency in the rental market, the Residential Tenancies and Rooming Accommodation Act 2008 (RTRA Act) mandates that Queensland landlords and property managers provide specific disclosures and standardized documentation to prospective tenants before and during the signing of a lease agreement.
Pre-Lease Disclosures
Before a prospective tenant signs a lease or commits any money, the landlord must disclose specific material facts that could reasonably influence the tenant's decision to rent the property.
1. Property On the Market for Sale
If the rental property is currently advertised for sale, or if the landlord has engaged a real estate agent to sell the property, this fact must be disclosed in writing to the prospective tenant before they sign the tenancy agreement (Form 18a).
If a landlord fails to disclose this and puts the property on the market within the first two months of a newly signed tenancy, the tenant has the legal right to terminate the lease with 14 days' written notice, without facing break-lease penalties.
2. Evidence of Last Rent Increase
With the 2024 implementation of the "12-month limit on rent increases attached to the property" rule, landlords must now disclose the date of the last rent increase.
If a new tenant enters a property, the landlord must be able to provide evidence upon request verifying exactly when the rent was last increased for that specific dwelling, so the tenant knows when the landlord is legally permitted to increase it again.
Mandatory Documentation at Move-In
On or before the day the tenant moves in, the landlord must physically or digitally supply a suite of required documents.
1. RTA Information Statement (Form 17a)
The landlord must give the tenant a copy of the official RTA "Pocket Guide for Tenants – Houses and Units" (Form 17a). This booklet outlines the basic rules regarding bonds, rent, and maintenance.
2. The General Tenancy Agreement (Form 18a)
The tenant must be provided with a written copy of the lease. In Queensland, it is mandatory to use the RTA’s standard General Tenancy Agreement (Form 18a) containing the state’s standard terms. Landlords can add "Special Terms" (e.g., no smoking indoors), provided they do not contract out of the RTRA Act.
3. Entry Condition Report (Form 1a)
The landlord must prepare an Entry Condition Report, sign it, and give a copy to the tenant on the day they move in. The tenant then has 7 days to add their own notes to the report, sign it, and return a copy to the landlord.
4. Body Corporate By-Laws
If the rental property is a unit, townhouse, or apartment governed by a Body Corporate (similar to an HOA in the US), the landlord must provide the tenant with a complete, written copy of the applicable Body Corporate by-laws before they sign the tenancy agreement. The tenant is legally bound to follow these by-laws as a condition of their lease.
Keeping Compliant with Landager
Forgetting to hand over an RTA Pocket Guide or the full 20-page Body Corporate by-laws document can complicate QCAT disputes down the line if you try to hold a tenant accountable for a breach they were unaware of. Landager’s dynamic onboarding workflows automatically bundle the necessary RTA Form 17a, state-specific leases, and specific Body Corporate rules into one seamless, trackable digital signing package.
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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