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Posted: 2023-03-23 20:34:05

Dennis Hayes considers himself lucky. 

After a life travelling around the country, he was forced into retirement after contracting the potentially deadly bacterial disease melioidosis while working in the Northern Territory's Top End.

Then he found his one-bedroom granny flat in the satellite city of Palmerston, near Darwin, and made a home for himself.

"Long-term, I want to stay in Darwin," he said. "I've travelled all around Australia and I want to finish up here."

As a pensioner, Mr Hayes was able to live in one of the 36,000 properties under the National Rental Affordability Scheme (NRAS), which means he has had about 25 per cent of his rent subsidised under a 10-year agreement between the government and his landlord.

However, his long-term plan is now in jeopardy, as the NRAS — which began in 2008 — will wrap up in 2026. And his specific, 10-year agreement will end in August this year.

An older man stands in a doorway, holding back a lace curtain
Mr Hayes is hoping he will be able to stay in the home he has lived in for three years. (ABC News: Michael Franchi)

Many NRAS properties are managed by Community Housing Providers, meaning their rent will stay below market value once the scheme ends.

However people such as Mr Hayes — whose properties are managed by private landlords — could be at the mercy of the market.

"At the moment, I'm paying $217 a week in rent. Market rent would have been about $260 when I moved in [three years ago]," Mr Hayes said. 

"But now it's up to about $280 to $310, which is the market value of rent for a one-bedroom development."

If he is offered a new lease with a significant spike in rent, he will "probably have to accept it", due to competitiveness in the current rental market. 

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