Kangaroo Point Berths Turn Into Homes as Brisbane Rents Stay High

About a third of the boats tied up at Dockside Marina in Kangaroo Point are now lived in full-time, according to the marina’s manager, as some Brisbane residents look beyond apartments for a place they can afford close to the city.



Dockside Marina manager Ken Allsop has seen more people living at the marina in recent years, and he estimates around one-third of the docked boats are now used as permanent homes. Reports cited that residents are making use of shared marina facilities such as bathrooms, showers and laundry, which can help make long-term stays workable in small cabins. 

Dockside Marina promotes its berths as an inner-city option at Kangaroo Point. One resident was described as moving from a house to an apartment, then onto a 1966 boat after deciding unit living did not suit him. His monthly marina fees included basics such as power and water. However, there are practical limits to boat life, including cramped space, low headroom, tight storage, and ongoing maintenance issues that can interrupt day-to-day routines. 

Rents and Prices Remain High

New figures help explain why some people are exploring unusual housing choices. Domain’s Rental Report for the December 2025 quarter put Brisbane’s median rent at $670 a week for houses and $650 a week for units, with quarterly rises in both categories. 

Cotality’s national rental analysis has also pointed to tight conditions, including low vacancy and strong rent growth over five years. While those figures are national, they reflect the broader strain many renters feel in high-demand markets. 

Buying a home has not become an easy alternative for many households. Reports stated that Queensland’s housing market continued rising into December, with Brisbane values increasing while affordability stayed a challenge. 

Boat Life Has Limits

Living aboard can reduce some weekly housing costs, but it can also bring extra work and unexpected expenses.  Full-time boat living has its trade-offs, balancing potential savings with ongoing upkeep, including maintenance demands that can be heavier on older vessels. 

In Kangaroo Point, boat living can be both practical and personal. Residents who saw the move as a lifestyle change as well as a way to manage costs, while also acknowledging the limits of space and the reality of repairs. 

Living aboard is not the same everywhere. Some marinas set conditions and require approval for liveaboards, covering issues such as safety and the use of facilities.  



Published 28-Jan-2026

Kangaroo Point Guide to Proposed Short-Stay Accommodation Permit Changes

Proposed short-stay accommodation rules could affect operators and residents in Kangaroo Point, with a permit system and complaint-response requirements outlined in a draft local law.



Why The Proposal Is Being Considered

Brisbane’s rental market has faced low vacancy rates and rising prices, with short-stay rentals frequently raised in discussions about housing availability. A taskforce examining short-stay accommodation began work in 2023, and a local law approach was later identified as a key recommendation in 2024.

The proposal is framed as a way to improve oversight of short-stay rentals and reduce issues such as noise and disruption in neighbourhoods.

short-stay accommodation
Photo Credit: Pexels

What The Proposed Permit System Covers

The Proposed Short Stay Accommodation Local Law 2025 would introduce a permit system for homes and apartments used for short stays, defined as stays of less than 90 days at a time.

Hotels, serviced apartments with on-site managers, and home-hosted stays where a resident remains on-site are listed among the exemptions set out in the proposal.

Operating Rules And Complaint Timeframes

Under the draft rules, permit holders would need to provide house rules to guests and display a permit number in advertisements. Public liability insurance would be required for the duration of each booking.

A nominated 24/7 contact person would be required to respond to complaints within 60 minutes and report actions taken within 24 hours. Serious incidents would continue to be handled by police.

Kangaroo Point short-stays
Photo Credit: Pexels

Planning Approval And Other Requirements

Some properties may also require development approval under Brisbane City Plan 2014, depending on zoning and any overlays such as flooding. The proposal notes that other approvals, where relevant, would need to be in place before a permit application can proceed.

Penalties And Enforcement

The draft framework sets out a stepped compliance approach, ranging from education and warnings through to fines and, in serious cases, prosecution. Proposed penalties include on-the-spot fines and court-imposed penalties, with the maximum proposed total reaching $141,865.

The proposal also allows for permit revocation following three breaches, and operating without a permit may trigger immediate enforcement action.

Consultation Dates And Commencement



Public consultation is open from 12 December 2025 to 16 February 2026. The proposal states the local law would commence on 1 July 2026, with permits required from that date.

Published 17-Dec-2025