Rentvesting separates where you live from where you invest. Here is how it works, who it suits, and the honest trade-offs.
By the Chase Wealth Australia advisory team · 10 July 2026
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Most Australians grow up with one script: buy the home you live in, pay it off, and let it quietly become your biggest asset. Rentvesting rewrites that script. It splits the decision of where you live from the decision of where you invest, so you can rent the home that suits your life and own property in the market that suits your numbers.
That split matters more in 2026 than it used to. The suburbs people most want to live in are often the ones where the numbers work hardest against an investor, while the growth corridors doing the heavy lifting sit somewhere else entirely. This guide explains what rentvesting is, why it is drawing in homeowners as well as first-timers, and the angle most explainers miss: combining the equity you already hold with a rentvesting strategy, so a Queensland or Western Australian growth corridor comes within reach while you keep living where you prefer. The trade-offs are here too, stated plainly.
Rentvesting is renting the home you live in while owning one or more investment properties elsewhere. You are a tenant in your own home and a landlord of your investment at the same time. The logic is simple once you separate the two roles a property plays: the home you want to live in and the property that performs best as an investment are rarely the same building, and rarely in the same suburb.
Renting the first lets you buy the second on merit. Instead of choosing a property because it is close to the school, the beach or the office, you choose it on yield, growth prospects and price. The rent you pay covers your lifestyle. The rent you collect, alongside the tax treatment that attaches to an investment, helps carry the holding costs while the asset does its work. Lifestyle and investment stop competing for the same dollar and start pulling in the same direction.
Two forces are behind the interest. The first is the gap between what it costs to buy in a lifestyle suburb and what it costs to rent there. In the areas people most want to live, buying ties up a very large deposit and a very large loan in a single property chosen for lifestyle rather than return. Renting the same street can cost far less than the mortgage would, and it frees the capital to work somewhere it grows faster.
The second is where the growth actually is. Brisbane’s median dwelling value reached about $1.13 million in May 2026 after rising 19.1 per cent in a year, and Perth’s passed $1.05 million after rising 25.8 per cent (Cotality, May 2026). Yet the growth corridors inside both cities still carry entry prices well below those medians, and their rental markets have little slack: Brisbane’s vacancy rate sat at 0.9 per cent in May 2026 with rents up 6.6 per cent year on year, and Perth houses were leasing in around 16 days (REIWA, mid-2026). A rentvestor can live where they want and still own an income-producing asset in a market with genuine tailwinds behind it.
Flexibility is the quiet third reason. Careers move, families change shape, and plenty of Australians (FIFO workers and the self-employed among them) are not tied to one postcode. Rentvesting keeps your living arrangement mobile while your investment stays put and compounds.
Classic rentvesting is written for people who have never bought: rent, save a cash deposit, buy an investment. Homeowners are usually told the opposite story, which is to buy your next home. But if you already own, you hold something a first-time rentvestor does not: usable equity, the portion of your home’s value a lender will release. That equity can fund the deposit and purchase costs on a growth-corridor investment without touching your savings, which means you can rentvest without starting from a cash deposit at all.
It also opens a second path. Some homeowners rent out (or sell) the home they own, rent where they would rather live, and redeploy their equity into a corridor where it stretches further. Either way the mechanism is the same one the complete guide to using equity to buy an investment property walks through, and the Equity Unlock Calculator shows how much of yours is usable before you speak to anyone. As a rough marker, a homeowner with around $140,000 of usable equity can cover the deposit and costs on an investment in the $550,000 to $700,000 band, which is exactly where the Queensland and Western Australian corridors sit. That is the Chase Wealth version of rentvesting: not a first-home-buyer workaround, but a way for an equity-rich homeowner to own where the numbers work while renting where life works.
Enter your property value and loan balance to see your usable equity and the price range it could fund.
Open the Equity Unlock CalculatorRentvesting suits a specific mindset more than a specific income. It tends to fit people whose ideal suburb is expensive to buy but reasonable to rent, people who move for work or lifestyle and do not want to be anchored to one location, and homeowners sitting on idle equity who want an income-producing asset without uprooting the family. Underneath all three is one trait: you care more about building a portfolio than about owning the particular roof over your head right now.
It fits less neatly in a few cases, and it is worth being honest about them. If owning your own home is a non-negotiable emotional goal, rentvesting asks you to defer something that matters deeply, and no return justifies a decision you will resent. If a single vacancy or a rate rise would stretch you past comfort, an investment you have to carry is the wrong kind of pressure. The security of owning where you live is real. Rentvesting swaps some of it for flexibility and for growth you choose on the numbers.
| Rentvesting | Buying where you live | |
|---|---|---|
| Where you live | Rent the suburb you want | Own the suburb you can afford |
| Where wealth builds | In a growth-corridor investment | In the home itself |
| Flexibility | Move as life changes | Tied to one location and its selling costs |
| Capital gains tax | Applies to the investment on sale | Main-residence exemption on your home |
| Deposit source | Cash, or your existing home equity | Cash deposit, or equity from a prior home |
Rentvesting is a strategy, not a shortcut, and it carries costs you should see before you commit.
None of these are reasons not to rentvest. They are the reasons to model it in full first: rent in, rent out, holding costs, buffer and tax, mapped against your income before anything is signed.
Rentvesting comes down to three sums, in order.
Those bands land squarely on real corridors. In South East Queensland, Ipswich entry suburbs like Leichhardt and One Mile sit under $700,000, and Logan offers similar entry-level stock within a fast-growing rental market. In Western Australia, Armadale’s suburb median was $630,000 (REIWA, year to June 2026), with other Perth entry corridors nearby at comparable price points. A $550,000 to $700,000 budget, whether it comes from cash or from equity, reaches all of them. If you want your numbers tested against live stock, our Brisbane and Perth advisors work these corridors directly.
Running all three sums together is the point: rentvesting only wins when the maths on both sides holds up at once. Renting where you live has to be genuinely cheaper than buying there, and the investment has to earn its keep in a market with real growth behind it. Get both right and the strategy does something a single owner-occupied home cannot, which is let your lifestyle and your wealth grow on separate tracks.
A strategy session tests both sides of the equation: what renting where you live frees up, and what your equity or deposit could buy in the Brisbane and Perth corridors. Bring your calculator result and we will pressure-test it against live lending conditions and real stock.
Book a strategy sessionThe numbers here are general information, not personal advice; a strategy session is where they become yours.