Break lease
Break Lease Costs Australia
Use the break lease calculator to estimate uncovered rent, advertising, reletting fees and other possible costs before you negotiate.
Quick answer
Use the break lease calculator to estimate uncovered rent, advertising, reletting fees and other possible costs before you negotiate.
What the break lease calculator estimates
The calculator is designed for planning possible exposure before you speak with an agent or landlord. Enter the weekly rent, the expected number of uncovered weeks, advertising or reletting costs, and any other known amounts to create a transparent estimate.
Costs that often drive the total
The largest variable is usually how long the property stays vacant before a replacement renter starts. Smaller items can include advertising, reletting fees, cleaning, key return costs, minor repairs or agreed administrative charges.
How to use the estimate
Use the result as a comparison number, not a final bill. Ask for itemised costs, dates, invoices or quotes, and evidence of attempts to relet the property where relevant.
Important limits
Break lease outcomes can depend on state rules, lease wording, mitigation efforts and evidence. This page is general information only and does not decide what you legally owe.
Renter action planner
Estimate
Use the related calculator to turn the issue into a rough dollar range before replying.
Collect proof
Keep photos, condition reports, receipts, quotes, invoices, emails and key dates together.
Compare
Compare any claimed amount with the evidence, the quote detail and the actual property condition.
Related calculators
Frequently asked questions
Can I use this break lease costs australia page as a final legal amount?
No. It is a planning estimate only. Break lease outcomes can depend on local rules, lease terms, mitigation, evidence and timing.
What should I check before paying break lease costs?
Ask for itemised costs, dates, invoices, advertising or reletting records, and an explanation of how the amount was calculated.
Disclaimer
This is general information only and not legal or financial advice.