Comparing rental compliance provider pricing can be misleading, even when quotes appear similar on the surface.
Nearly all providers now offer full compliance delivery so the difference is not whether the work gets done, but how pricing is applied across compliance cycles, the level of service and what is included in the fee.
Without breaking this down, it’s easy to compare the wrong things.
At a Glance
If you’re comparing rental compliance providers, focus on:
What is included in the base price and what is charged separately
How pricing behaves across a full two-year compliance cycle
When additional costs are triggered
Whether pricing is fixed or varies by property
How pricing is applied across your portfolio, including any multi-property discount
Why rental compliance provider pricing is hard to compare
In Victoria, rental compliance has become a highly competitive market following the introduction of Rental Minimum Standards in 2021.
Most providers now offer full compliance delivery, but there is no consistent pricing structure across the market. Some rental compliance providers use lower upfront pricing with itemised costs as issues arise, while others include more within a higher base fee.
In addition to this structural difference, compliance requirements operate across different cycles, with some safety checks required annually and others every two years.
This combination of:
multiple pricing models
varying inclusions
non-aligned compliance cycles
...means that two quotes can appear similar at first glance, but behave very differently over time.

Comparing rental compliance providers requires looking beyond headline pricing to understand what is actually included over time.
What varies between rental compliance providers
When pricing is compared in isolation, a true comparison requires looking beyond the headline figure to what is included.
Across the market, several elements are structured differently between providers.
In some models, costs such as smoke alarm replacement, electrical rectification, Rental Minimum Standards checks and follow-up visits are charged separately as they arise. In others, these are included in the base fee or offered at a reduced rate.
This means the quoted price may only represent part of the total cost, and the final amount can vary depending on the condition of the property, what is identified during inspection, and any issues that arise over time.
Other pricing models include more within the base fee, resulting in a higher upfront cost but fewer additional charges over time.
Why the compliance cycle distorts pricing
Rental compliance does not follow a single annual structure. Smoke alarm safety checks are required annually, while gas safety checks and electrical safety checks are required every two years. These services also carry different costs, with gas and electrical safety checks typically more expensive than smoke alarm checks.
This creates a two-year compliance cycle where both the mix and cost of required services can vary significantly from year to year. In some cases, gas and smoke alarm safety checks may fall in the same year, with electrical safety checks due the next. In others, all three may be required in a single year, followed by a year where only smoke alarm safety checks are needed.
As a result, one year may appear significantly more expensive than another. Depending on how a provider structures pricing, this can make one option seem cheaper in a given year, even if it is not across the full cycle.

Headline pricing alone rarely reflects the true long-term cost of rental compliance providers.
Why the headline price can be unreliable
A single quoted figure reflects a point in time, not how pricing behaves across a full compliance cycle.
Because costs are structured differently and applied at different stages, a lower upfront price can shift significantly depending on what is included, when services fall due, and what is identified during inspection.
This means headline pricing on its own is not a reliable basis for comparison.
How to compare providers properly
To make a like-for-like comparison, it helps to standardise what you’re assessing.
What is included in the base price?
When are additional costs are triggered?
What is the total cost across a full compliance cycle?
Is pricing is fixed or variable?
How is pricing applied across your portfolio?

A proper compliance comparison focuses on long-term value, not just headline pricing.
Other factors to consider
Pricing is one part of the comparison, but operational delivery can also affect how smoothly compliance is managed.
This includes:
if the provider can deliver all safety checks in one annual visit to minimise disruption for renters
whether the pricing is based on a lock in subscription and if cancellation fees apply
whether you have a consistent point of contact or account manager
how tenant communication and access is handled
how follow-ups and missed appointments are managed
whether the provider is set up to minimise disruption to renters
These factors do not always appear in pricing, but can influence how the service performs in practice.
What a like-for-like comparison actually requires
Rather than focusing on which provider is cheaper, it is more useful to consider how pricing behaves over time.
This means moving beyond a single quoted figure and assessing what is included, how costs are structured and applied, and how pricing presents across your portfolio over a full compliance cycle.
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Because more costs may sit outside the base price and are triggered later depending on what is identified during inspections.
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