Housing Variables

Latest release

Housing standards used to collect information about dwellings and occupancy. Includes structure, tenure, landlord type and number of bedrooms

Reference period
2020
Released
14/12/2020
Next release Unknown

Summary

The ABS housing standards provide standard methods for compiling statistics about the tenure, occupancy and physical characteristics of Australian dwellings. In particular, the standards contain standard definitions, standard data collection methods, standard derivation procedures and standard output classifications. These standard features are recommended for use in all relevant ABS and external statistical collections to ensure consistency across publications. The use of ABS housing standards ensures that consistent information about Australian dwellings is available to inform social and economic policies that relate to housing in Australia. The housing standard variables are used within and outside the ABS to collect information about the types of dwellings in Australia and how they are occupied. They include the variables Dwelling Structure, Tenure, Landlord Type, and Number of Bedrooms. These variables provide a means for standardising the way housing data are collected and disseminated.

Tenure Type

Background

Tenure Type is the variable that describes the legal basis by which a person occupies a dwelling. Data about whether a dwelling is owned, being purchased or rented have been of importance to Australian governments for a long time, having been collected in all Censuses of Population and Housing since 1911, and in more recent decades, in various ABS household surveys. Tenure Type is an important classificatory variable for informing governments and other users on the composition of Australian households, and is also an important analytical variable in household socio-economic research.

The Tenure Type standard accords with, and in some respects exceeds, the requirements set out in the Tenure topic (paragraph 4.556) of the United Nations' Principles and Recommendations for Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 3. For example, the Tenure Type standard includes two additional categories, 'Being purchased under a shared equity scheme' and 'Occupied under a life tenure scheme', that reflect the particular policy priorities of Australia. The Tenure Type standard provides a more detailed categorisation of tenure than those of most comparable countries. The United States of America and Canada each have a two category tenure classification: owner occupied; and renter occupied. The United Kingdom has a three category system of tenure, with renters being split into 'Social Renters' and 'Private Renters' while New Zealand is an exception, having a tenure classification with more categories than the Tenure Type standard. 

Introduction to the standard

Collection of variable data

Processing the data

Presenting the data

References

Landlord Type

Background

Renting a dwelling in Australia is not a uniform experience in terms of security of tenure, cost and affordability, and in other ways. Accordingly, the Landlord Type standard exists to classify renting households, income units, and persons into the different types of arrangement that exist. When it was created in 1995, the categories were chosen to be compatible with previous nature of occupancy, and Landlord Type data produced from Censuses of Population and Housing (Census), various Special Supplementary Surveys (SSS) and Monthly Population Surveys' (MPS) Supplementary Surveys.

Earlier versions of the standard (1995, 2001) were hierarchical, and were collapsed into a single level or 'flat' classification in the 2014 review. 

The ABS has a more developed Landlord Type standard than those of national statistical offices in comparable countries, and the United Nations:

  • Statistics Canada — although the 'Tenure including presence of mortgage payments and subsidized housing' classification breaks rental housing down into whether or not it is subsidised, there does not appear to be a Statistics Canada classification that further divides subsidised rental into its components: "rent geared to income, social housing, public housing, government-assisted housing, non-profit housing, rent supplements and housing allowances" (Statistics Canada 2016).
  • The United Kingdom, with a more decentralised national statistical system than Australia, does not have a separate Landlord Type standard. Rather, of the four tenure categories for most housing statistics, three are types of renting: privately; from housing associations; and from local authorities.
  • In the United States of America, both the annual American Community Survey (ACS) and the biennial American Housing Survey (AHS) use a two category classification of tenure only: owner-occupied and renter-occupied (United States Census Bureau 2017).
  • The United Nations Principles and Recommendations for Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 3, sets out the UN's existing standards. The Tenure topic (paragraph 4.556) includes within its categories whether a household rents a housing unit (dwelling) as a main tenant, or as a subtenant; as well as whether the household occupies the housing unit partly free of rent; or wholly free of rent, but does not have a separate Landlord Type topic. 

It is important to note that Landlord Type is dependent on the Tenure Type standard, as it provides a more detailed break-down of the tenure categories 'renter', 'boarder' as well as 'rent-free'. Accordingly, this dependency needs to be carefully considered when reviewing either of these standards.

Introduction to the standard

Collection of variable data

Processing the data

Presenting the data

References

Dwelling Structure

Background

Dwelling Structure is the variable that provides a standard classification of the different types of private dwelling structures, such as houses, flats, townhouses, etc.

This standard has been designed to be comparable with the Functional Classification of Buildings (BLD) used in the ABS Building Approvals, ABS's Measuring Australia's Housing Supply (MAHS), the ABS's Building Activity Survey collections and the Structure of Dwelling (STRD) used in the ABS's Census. 

Introduction to the standard

Collection of variable data

Processing the data

Presenting the data

References

Number of Bedrooms

Background

The Number of Bedrooms variable provides a count of the number of bedrooms in each occupied private dwelling, including caravans in caravan parks.

The Number of Bedrooms variable is also used to derive indicators of crowding (i.e. by considering the number of bedrooms in the household in combination with the number of people in the household and the demographic details of these people) and dwelling size.

Introduction to the standard

Collection of variable data

Processing the data

Presenting the data

Glossary

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Previous catalogue number

This release previously used catalogue number 1200.0.55.011.
 

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