Victoria Lease Requirements: Prescribed Forms and Mandatory Terms

Guide to Victoria rental agreement requirements including prescribed CAV forms, prohibited clauses, mandatory terms, and 2025-2026 application reforms.

Melvin Prince
6 min read
Verified Apr 2026Australia flag
Lease-agreementVictoriaRental-agreementPrescribed-formCAV

Legal Disclaimer

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.Information last verified: April 2026.

Standard Form
Consumer Affairs Victoria Required
Condition Report
Mandatory

Victoria has strict requirements for rental agreements — rental providers must use prescribed forms from Consumer Affairs Victoria and cannot include certain prohibited clauses. Non-compliance can result in penalties and unenforceable terms.

Executing a Rental Agreement in victoria

1

Select Prescribed Form

Use the official Consumer Affairs Victoria (CAV) standard form for all residential tenancies. Using any other form is illegal.

2

Negotiate Permitted Terms

Include rent, bond, pet permission, and other lawful terms. Ensure no prohibited clauses are included.

3

Provide Documents

Give the renter the signed agreement, Renters Guide, condition report, keys, and urgent repairs contact.

4

Lodge Bond with RTBA

Lodge the bond with the Residential Tenancies Bond Authority within 10 business days.

Prescribed Form

Victoria mandates the use of the Consumer Affairs Victoria (CAV) prescribed standard form for all written residential rental agreements.

RequirementDescription
Standard FormMust be used for all residential tenancies, including fixed-term and periodic agreements
Custom TermsAdditional terms are permitted but must not conflict with the Act or include prohibited clauses
Illegal FormsIt is an offence to use a non-prescribed agreement format

Key Rules

  • It is illegal for a rental provider or agent to prepare a written agreement that is not the official CAV standard form
  • The same standard form is used for agreements regardless of their duration, including those exceeding five years
  • Verbal agreements are legally binding but written agreements are strongly recommended for enforceability

Agreement Types

Fixed-Term Agreement

  • Has a defined start and end date
  • Cannot be ended early without cause or agreement from both parties
  • Rent cannot increase during the term unless the agreement specifies the method
  • At expiry, converts to periodic (month-to-month) if neither party acts

Periodic (Month-to-Month) Agreement

  • Continues indefinitely until ended by either party
  • Rental providers must give 90 days' notice to end (with valid reason)
  • Renters must give 28 days' notice to end
  • Rent can be increased once per 12 months with 90 days' notice

Mandatory Agreement Contents

Every rental agreement must include:

  1. Rent amount and payment method
  2. Bond amount (if applicable)
  3. Urgent repairs contact — phone number
  4. Contact details — rental provider/agent full name, address, email
  5. Agreement type and duration — fixed-term dates or periodic
  6. Condition report reference
  7. Pet permission — whether pets are approved (if applicable)

Prohibited Clauses

The following terms cannot be included in Victorian rental agreements:

Prohibited ClauseWhy It's Invalid
Requiring the renter to take out insuranceRenter's choice
Additional rent or penalties for breaking rulesNot permitted
Requiring payment for agreement preparationLandlord's cost
Requiring payment via a method that incurs extra costsBeyond standard bank fees
Mandating a nominated third-party service providerExcept embedded networks

| Making the renter pay for maintenance of safety equipment | Landlord's responsibility | Indemnifying the rental provider | Unenforceable | Paying the rental provider's VCAT costs | Not permitted | Paying insurance excess for landlord's policy | Renter not liable | Fixed fee for early termination without clear calculation basis | Must explain how calculated | Mandatory professional cleaning at end of tenancy | Unless restoring to original condition per condition report |

Documents Provided at Signing The rental provider must give the renter:

  • A copy of the written rental agreement
  • The "Renters Guide" from Consumer Affairs Victoria
  • A condition report (two paper or one electronic copy)
  • A complete set of keys (one per renter)
  • Contact details for urgent repairs

Modifications During Tenancy

Changes to a rental agreement during the tenancy require:

  • Written agreement from both parties
  • Modifications should be documented as addenda to the original agreement
  • Certain terms (e.g., rent, bond) have specific procedures for changes

Ending a Tenancy

Renter's Notice

  • Periodic tenancy: 28 days' written notice
  • Fixed-term: generally cannot end early without cause or mutual agreement
  • Some circumstances allow early termination (family violence, property damage)

Rental Provider's Notice

  • Must provide a valid reason (from November 2025)
  • 90 days' notice for non-fault reasons
  • 14 days for fault-based reasons (nonpayment, breach)

Best Practices for Rental Providers

  1. Always use the prescribed CAV standard form — Any other format is illegal
  2. Review for prohibited clauses — Ensure no unlawful terms are included
  3. Keep signed copies — Both parties should retain their copies
  4. Provide all documents before move-in — agreement, guide, condition report, keys
  5. Update templates regularly — Laws change frequently in Victoria
  6. Seek legal review — Have a property lawyer review your standard terms

Back to Victoria Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

Residential vs Commercial

Residential Tenancy

Bond capped at 1 month rent, no-fault evictions abolished, 90-day notice period, late fees illegal, VCAT jurisdiction.

VS

Commercial Lease

Negotiable deposit (often 3-6 months rent), lease-governed eviction, late fees and interest permitted, VSBC mediation for retail.

Sources & Official References

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Major cities governed by Victoria jurisdiction

MelbourneCranbourneGeelongBallaratBendigoMeltonPakenhamFrankstonSunburyMilduraSheppartonDandenongWarrnamboolTraralgonWarragulWodongaMount ElizaWangarattaLaraHorshamEchucaWallanBarwon HeadsMorwellSaleTorquayLeopoldDrouinSomervilleKangaroo FlatMelbourneCranbourneGeelongBallaratBendigoMeltonPakenhamFrankstonSunburyMilduraSheppartonDandenongWarrnamboolTraralgonWarragulWodongaMount ElizaWangarattaLaraHorshamEchucaWallanBarwon HeadsMorwellSaleTorquayLeopoldDrouinSomervilleKangaroo FlatMelbourneCranbourneGeelongBallaratBendigoMeltonPakenhamFrankstonSunburyMilduraSheppartonDandenongWarrnamboolTraralgonWarragulWodongaMount ElizaWangarattaLaraHorshamEchucaWallanBarwon HeadsMorwellSaleTorquayLeopoldDrouinSomervilleKangaroo FlatMelbourneCranbourneGeelongBallaratBendigoMeltonPakenhamFrankstonSunburyMilduraSheppartonDandenongWarrnamboolTraralgonWarragulWodongaMount ElizaWangarattaLaraHorshamEchucaWallanBarwon HeadsMorwellSaleTorquayLeopoldDrouinSomervilleKangaroo Flat

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