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Posted: 2023-02-04 00:25:25

An estimated 5,000 international students heading to Perth to study this month have nowhere to stay, prompting desperate calls from universities for staff and alumni to offer beds in their own homes to accommodate them.

The housing affordability crisis and subsequent shortage of rentals, combined with the return of international students at levels set to exceed pre-pandemic numbers at some institutions, have contributed to the problem.

Nepalese student Prasidha Neupane flew to Perth last month to undertake a Masters in Environmental Engineering, but the accommodation he had pre-booked turned out not to exist.

"I couldn't find the address as a place [on a map] and the person vanished, vanished from everywhere, including Facebook," he said.

Students facing homelessness

Finding alternative accommodation proved impossible.

"At that moment, I became homeless, I didn't have any place to go in Perth," he said.

"I didn't know anybody. I don't have friends, I don't have family.

"So I didn't have any choice rather [than] to book a domestic ticket and come to Melbourne where my sister is living."

Study Perth chief executive Derryn Belford, whose organisation helps develop the international student market, said a big jump in enrolments was expected this semester, based on information received from its member organisations.

Headshot of a smiling woman
Derryn Belford says an estimated 5,000 international students are without accommodation. (ABC News: Jon Samball)

She expected 5,000 beds were still needed for students.

"Obviously, that's a fluid situation, because for some students, they will decide if they can't get accommodation that they will actually go somewhere else," she said.

Surging student numbers

At UWA, applications from international students are up 40 per cent on the same time last year, and a whopping 33 per cent on pre-pandemic levels, while Curtin and Murdoch universities are also expecting significant increases in international student numbers this semester.

Ms Belford said previously, students typically spent six months in on-campus halls of residence, before moving out with friends into share houses.

However, the severe shortage of affordable housing meant students were staying longer in university accommodation, making it even more difficult for new students to get places.

People studying in a bright area adorned with flag bunting
Study Perth's student hub, in Perth's CBD, provides support services and space for study and relaxation.(ABC News: Andrea Mayes)

In addition, local students had been offered discount rates to stay at campus accommodation when WA's borders were closed during the pandemic, and many were reluctant to move out because of the difficulty of securing affordable alternative housing.

Almost all on-campus accommodation across the three universities was fully booked well in advance of the start of semester, prompting management to adopt desperate measures in an effort to secure more beds for students.

Staff asked to house students

In a note to staff dated January 20 and seen by the ABC, Curtin vice-chancellor Harlene Hayne noted demand for student accommodation was at "peak level" thanks to the return of international students.

She asked staff to consider housing international students on a short or long term basis.

"I know Curtin staff understand how international students enrich both our university and our local community, and I encourage those with a room to rent to consider hosting a student," she wrote.

Students near a university guild sign
Curtin staff have been asked to consider taking students in. (ABC News: Cason Ho)

The Curtin branch of the National Tertiary Education Union said an "alarming number" of international students have no housing lined up, blaming university management for not taking action sooner, especially given the already heated wider housing market.

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