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The changing landscape of rental applications in South Africa

The changing landscape of rental applications in South Africa

IOL News02-07-2025
Discover the latest findings from the PayProp Rental Index, revealing that over a quarter of South African rental applicants are classified as high-risk. This analysis explores the implications for landlords and rental agents in 2025.
Image: Independent Newspapers.
A detailed risk analysis in the latest PayProp Rental Index highlights a significant challenge for landlords and rental agents: more than a quarter of South African rental applicants were classed as high-risk in Q1 2025.
Based on data from the Tenant Assessment Report, PayProp's market-leading tenant screening tool, 26% of prospective tenants fell into the scoring system's highest risk bracket, up from 25% a year ago.
Landlords are seeing improved returns from healthy rental price growth in 2025, but it's important not to get complacent. Tenant affordability is lower due to the cost of living in many provinces, and with one in four applicants potentially presenting a payment risk, thorough vetting is non-negotiable.
Traditional credit checks offer only part of the picture when it comes to assessing tenant payment reliability, as they score the applicant based on their debt repayment history but often don't take rental payments into account. In contrast, PayProp combines credit scoring with rental payment histories captured from the platform to reveal where tenants fall on the risk spectrum. Analysis by PayProp ahead of a recent training webinar found that it was 94% better at predicting bad tenant behaviour than a traditional credit score when applied to a sample of real tenant data.
In Q1 2025,
● 39.6% of lease applicants were rated minimum-risk
● 20.0% were low-risk
● 14.5% were medium-risk
● 26.0% were high-risk
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This distribution across the risk spectrum suggests that rental applicants are becoming more concentrated at both ends of the risk scale lately, making careful tenant selection more important than ever.
Income trumps all as a risk predictor
As can be expected, income is the strongest determinant of tenant risk. Among applicants earning R80,000 or more per month, 60.6% were classed as presenting minimum risk and just 12.2% as being high-risk. In the lowest income bracket (R10,000 - R20,000), only 23% qualified as minimum-risk, while 37% were high-risk.
Affordability is one of the first things any agent will check, and this helps demonstrate why. It also means that careful vetting is even more essential for lower-priced properties, as applicants are more likely to fall into lower income brackets. However, there are high-risk and low-risk tenants in every income bracket, and using smarter tools helps agents identify low-income, low-affordability tenants who nevertheless have perfect payment records.
Youth equals uncertainty
Age also plays a clear role. The 20 - 29 age group showed the lowest share of minimum-risk tenants (29.6%), likely due to thinner credit files and shorter rental histories. However, despite being unknown quantities in normal credit scoring terms, this group tends to have more disposable income after debt and rent, making them potentially better prospects than raw scores may suggest.
In contrast, 61.3% of applicants over 60 were classified as presenting minimum risk, and tenant risk declined sharply for all age groups over 50, which indicates a pattern likely linked to more stable financial positions and mature credit profiles.
Debt dynamics by gender
Interestingly, the report finds only slight gender-based differences in tenant risk, despite women earning roughly 80% of what men do, according to Stats SA. 40.1% of men were assessed as minimum-risk, compared to 39.1% of women. One possible explanation is that women spent 3.2% less of their income on debt repayments than men, improving their overall affordability profile.
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