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Gold Coast's Short-Term Rental Crackdown: What Happens Next and the Key Decisions Ahead

With state regulators tightening the screws on Airbnb-style listings, Gold Coast property owners and councils face a sequence of choices that will reshape the city's housing market before the 2032 Olympics.

By Gold Coast News Desk · Published 5 July 2026, 4:57 am

4 min read

Gold Coast's Short-Term Rental Crackdown: What Happens Next and the Key Decisions Ahead
Photo: Photo by Petra Nesti on Pexels

Queensland's short-term rental registration framework is now active, and Gold Coast property owners have until late 2026 to comply or face penalties — a deadline that is concentrating minds from Surfers Paradise to Coolangatta faster than any previous regulatory push in the region's recent history.

The timing matters because the Gold Coast sits at a peculiar intersection: a tourism economy that depends on private holiday lets, a housing affordability crisis squeezing long-term renters out of suburbs like Burleigh Heads and Palm Beach, and the looming pressure of the 2032 Brisbane-Southeast Queensland Olympics, with venues at Coomera Indoor Sports Centre and Robina Stadium already anchoring local planning conversations. Every dwelling that stays on Airbnb is one that doesn't enter the rental pool. Every dwelling that leaves the short-term market is one less bed for the millions of visitors expected across the Games period. The city cannot afford to get this wrong.

The Regulatory Landscape Taking Shape

The Queensland Government's short-term accommodation register, administered under the Tourism Accommodation Registration Act framework, requires hosts to list their properties with the state. Gold Coast City Council, whose planning scheme already flags short-term letting as a distinct land use in high-density zones along the Glitter Strip, must now reconcile its own approval pathways with the state overlay. Council's planning and environment committee has flagged a review of the local planning instrument before the end of 2026, according to agendas published on the council's website.

Surfers Paradise, where apartment towers along the Esplanade have operated as de facto serviced apartment blocks for decades, will feel the regulatory shift most acutely. Buildings in that precinct typically have body corporate rules that either permit or prohibit short-term letting — and the new state registration requirement gives body corporates fresh leverage to enforce those rules, because an unregistered listing is now a legal liability rather than merely a breach of house rules.

In the hinterland and southern growth corridors, the dynamic is different. Owners of freestanding houses in suburbs such as Mudgeeraba and Varsity Lakes have operated relatively under the radar. The registration mandate changes that calculus. The Queensland Government has indicated penalty infringement notices can reach $2,875 for individuals who fail to register, according to publicly available information on the state's accommodation registration portal.

The Decisions That Will Define the Next 18 Months

Three pressure points are converging before the end of financial year 2027. First, Gold Coast City Council must decide whether to introduce a cap on short-term rental approvals in designated residential zones — a move being actively debated in council chambers but not yet formalised as a policy resolution. Second, the state government's review of the registration scheme's first operational year, expected in the first quarter of 2027, will determine whether compliance rates justify the current penalty structure or whether harsher enforcement tools are needed. Third, the property sector itself must weigh whether the Olympic accommodation shortfall — estimates circulating within the tourism industry suggest the Gold Coast will need tens of thousands of additional visitor beds for the Games fortnight — makes short-term letting more commercially attractive than ever, even under tighter rules.

For owners currently operating on platforms like Airbnb and Stayz in areas like Broadbeach Waters and Hope Island, the practical advice from property managers and strata lawyers is consistent: register now, audit your body corporate rules, and lodge any development applications for a change-of-use assessment before council's planning instrument review closes. Waiting costs more than complying. The registration window is open, the penalties are real, and the city's appetite for regulatory ambiguity — already strained by years of coastal development controversy — has essentially run out. What happens in the next six months will set the framework under which Gold Coast property investors operate for the decade that ends with an Olympic torch.

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