Tarragindi Rent Pressure Builds as Low Vacancy Limits Options

Tarragindi renters are now looking at a typical house rent of about $795 a week, a figure that shows how quickly a “stay-put” suburb can become a stretch when more households are chasing the same small pool of homes.



After the December 2025 quarter, the December 2025 Domain Rental Report reported Brisbane’s median house rent rose to $670 a week and the median unit rent rose to $650, with Brisbane recording the strongest quarterly rise in house rents of any capital city. 

What the Data Says in Tarragindi

Tarragindi’s typical house rent is about $795 per week and typical unit rent is about $525 per week, based on recent listings and market tracking. That keeps Tarragindi above the Brisbane-wide median for houses, even as renters become more careful about what they can afford.

Different snapshots can vary depending on which slice of listings is counted. A Tarragindi unit snapshot on rentals page puts the median unit rent closer to $500 a week, based on recent unit listings. Taken together, the figures point to the same message for locals: costs remain high, and small changes can look big when only a limited number of units are listed over a year.

Why Competition Stays Strong

One reason rents can stay elevated, even when conditions soften in parts of the market, is the lack of slack in the wider system. The Real Estate Institute of Queensland reported Greater Brisbane’s vacancy rate at 0.9% in its latest quarterly update, a level it describes as firmly tight. When vacancies sit that low, renters have fewer back-up options and less room to negotiate. 

Reports for the December-quarter rise also point to tight supply as the main driver of higher rents across the city, while noting the pace of growth can ease when more renters hit affordability limits. 

What Does This Mean for Tarragindi?

For Tarragindi households, the pressure often shows up in the time it takes to find a suitable home within budget. When the typical house rent is near $800 a week, families and sharers who want to stay near established schools, transport links and everyday services can be forced to widen their search or accept trade-offs on size, condition or location.

The citywide trend is also important because it shapes where people look next. An ABC report on Brisbane’s December-quarter results noted Brisbane was a standout for renewed rental growth, while also pointing to a practical limit on what renters can pay. 

Economists have suggested rents may keep edging higher in the near term, but the speed of increases can slow as households push back on price. 

In a suburb like Tarragindi, that can mean renters place more weight on value and liveability, while the wider vacancy rate remains the key factor shaping the amount of choice people have.



Published 28-Jan-2026

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