Be ready for the new
Airbnb short-term letting laws in NSW
Short-term letting hosts using Airbnb style booking
platforms are now officially welcome to provide
accommodation in Sydney and elsewhere in New South Wales,
following the passing of two new laws by the NSW Parliament.
Together with a third new law, the laws will come into force
and effect in early 2019.
This is an outline of the new laws:
New sections 52A to 54E of
the Fair Trading Act 1987 (passed
14/08/2018)
What is a short-term rental?
Residential rentals are normally for periods 6 or 12 months.
But the Residential Tenancy laws do not apply if it
is a tenancy of up to 3 months, so long as it is a holiday
rental.
New sections 52A to 54E of the Fair Trading Act 1987
fill the 3 month gap in which Airbnb style short-term rental
has flourished, with a short-term rental accommodation
arrangement, which is:
a commercial arrangement for giving a person
the right to occupy residential premises for a
period of not more than 3 months at any one time
The new law only applies if the occupancy is a commercial
arrangement – it does not apply to domestic arrangements
such as a homestays by friends and relatives, where no money
changes hands.
The new law only applies to residential premises – it
does not apply to hotels, motels, resorts, serviced
apartments, caravan parks, backpacker hostels and other
tourist accommodation, because they are commercial premises.
Who does the new law apply to?
The new law applies not only to home owners and strata unit
owners, but to everyone who participates in short-term
rentals.
It defines a short-term rental accommodation industry
participant – as a person who:
- provides an online booking service (i.e. booking
platforms like Airbnb, HomeAway/Stayz), or
- carries on business as an agent (i.e. holiday
letting agents and property managers), or
- gives another person the right to occupy as a
short-term rental (i.e. hosts), or
- is given the right to occupy as a short-term rental
(i.e. visitors), or
- facilitates short-term rental accommodation
arrangements (i.e everyone else)
What is the code of conduct for short-term rental
accommodation industry participants?
All participants must comply with a code of conduct, which
will be published in the regulations, and which will set out
the rights and obligations of short-term accommodation
industry participants.
The code of conduct will prohibit anti-social and
irresponsible behaviour. That is, behaviour which
unreasonably interferes with a neighbour’s quiet and
peaceful enjoyment of their home, and will address impacts
from noise, parking and garbage.
The code of conduct will contain administrative provisions,
namely:
- A body to administer the code
- Registration of residential premises used and
details of when they are used
- Warnings to be given for contravening the code
- A complaints system
- Procedures for assessing complaints and resolution
of disputes
- An exclusion register of participants who commit two
serious breaches of the code within two years, and who
will be banned for five years
The “two strikes and you’re out” policy will result in a
listing on the exclusion register.
But a serious contravention of the code will also be a
criminal offence, punishable by a fine of up to $1.1 million
for corporations and $220,000 for individuals. Or NSW Fair
Trading may choose to pursue a civil penalty for the breach.
The code of conduct, its enforcement, the compliance system
and the exclusion register will be funded by industry.
New section 137A of the
Strata Schemes Management Act 2015
(passed 14/08/2018)
‘No Airbnb’ By-Laws
New section 137A resolves the confusion about whether a
strata scheme can outlaw short-term rentals, by stating that
they can be outlawed under a strata by-law if the owner is
not using the home unit / villa as their principal place of
residence. The by-law must be passed by special resolution
(i.e. a 75% majority).
Specifically:
- An owners corporation can make a by-law to:
prohibit a lot being used for the purposes of a
short-term rental accommodation arrangement if the
lot is not the principal place of residence of the
person who pursuant to the arrangement, is giving
another person the right to occupy the lot.
- An owners corporation cannot make a by-law to:
prevent a lot being used for the purposes of a
short-term rental accommodation arrangement if the
lot is the principal place of residence of the
person who pursuant to the arrangement, is giving
another person the right to occupy the lot.
New Environmental Planning
Laws (pending)
The new laws will also consist of amendments to the
Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979. They are
yet to be tabled.
For residences where the host is present, it is
proposed to allow short-term rentals all year round in NSW.
For residences where the host is not present, it is
proposed to allow a holiday use for up to 180 days per year
in Greater Sydney. Elsewhere in NSW, 365 days will be
allowed, but the Local Council will have power to decrease
this to 180 days. The days are expected to be defined as
‘days occupied’ not ‘days available for occupation’. There
is no minimum number of days for a stay so overnight will be
acceptable.
Both of these uses will be allowed as exempt development
in residential zones. That is, no development application
will need to be made to the Local Council, and no approval
will be necessary for that use. Additional conditions will
apply to bushfire prone land to ensure visitor safety.
The new laws will provide a clear definition of use as
short-term rental accommodation and interface with other
types of tourist and visitor accommodation uses in
planning instruments, such as backpacker’s, bed and
breakfast, hotel, motel and serviced apartments.
Commentary – Strata
Schemes
Will a “No Airbnb’ by-law be effective in mixed
commercial & residential strata schemes?
As noted, Strata Schemes will have the power to pass a ‘No
Airbnb’ by-law to ban short-term letting of strata
apartments which are not a principal place of residence.
However, the planning laws are expected to be able to
override a ‘No Airbnb’ by-law where the property is not
residential premises or is in a non-residential zone or is
in a mixed zone or tourist zone where commercial uses are
allowed, and the Local Council approves a use as tourist
and visitor accommodation, such as serviced apartments.
Will pre-existing ‘No Airbnb’ by-laws stand or will they
need to be put to a fresh vote next year after the new laws
come into force?
There is no guidance given under the new laws, but it is
relevant to note that one of the amendments proposed to the
new laws as they were being considered by parliament was to
validate pre-existing ‘No Airbnb’ by-laws. That amendment
was defeated. A pre-existing by-law will be invalid if, for
example, it bans strata owners from using their principal
place of residence for short-term rentals.
As a result, the best advice is that a new ‘No Airbnb’
by-law will need to be put to a general meeting of the
owners corporation in the new year after the new laws come
into force. That by-law will need to be carefully drafted so
as not to overreach in banning short-term rentals for
principal places of residence, which are rented while the
owner is away on holidays or on business.
Will an owner’s corporation have any control without a
‘No Airbnb’ by-law?
NSW Fair Trading will develop a short-term letting
information kit (‘what you can and can’t do’) for owners
corporations.
The kit will contain advice on how to use other existing
strata laws to help deal with short-term letting, such as:
requiring 21 days notice before commencing to use the lot
for short-term rental accommodation; and restricting the
occupancy of bedrooms in a lot to no more than two adults.
Summary for strata
owner-occupiers and strata investors:
A strata owner-occupier can rent the apartment they
live in as a principal place of residence for short-term
rental accommodation for up to 180 days per year in Greater
Sydney, and 365 days per year elsewhere in NSW.
- This is despite the fact that the owners corporation
has passed a ‘No Airbnb’ by-law.
- What is more, no Local Council approval is
necessary.
- All that is needed is to give 21 days notice to the
owners corporation before the short term renting
activity starts (not before each rental starts).
A strata investor can rent their investment apartment
for short term rental accommodation for up to 180 days per
year in Greater Sydney, and 365 days per year elsewhere in
NSW unless the owners corporation passes a ‘No Airbnb’
by-law.
It is expected that the planning laws will allow a
‘No-Airbnb’ by-law to be overridden if the planning scheme
allows tourist and visitor accommodation use. In that case
the owner may be allowed to rent out their apartment with
development approval.
Comment – the politics
The new laws are a compromise between competing interests.
In reading the bill a second time before parliament, Mr Matt
Kean (Minister for Innovation and Better Regulation) stated:
We have worked hard to strike the right balance
between preserving the ability of homeowners to use
their properties as they wish and maintaining the strong
economic benefits of short-term holiday letting with the
public concerns about adverse impacts of short-term
rental accommodation such as increased levels of noise,
disturbance and impacts on neighbourhood amenity.
The law will be reviewed one year after it commences, to see
if the right balance has indeed been struck.
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