Queensland Management Rights Market Wrap: May 2026

Fresh data from TheOnsiteManager shows Queensland’s management rights market remained active through May 2026, with 516 Queensland listings visible in the marketplace at the time of the latest scrape. Across the national site there were 533 listings, reinforcing that Queensland continues to carry the deepest management rights inventory in the country.

The current mix remains broad rather than one-dimensional. The largest concentration of stock came from Gold Coast (134), Brisbane (133), Sunshine Coast (39), while the strongest listing types by count were Permanent (339), Resort / Holiday (136), Caretaking (20), Holiday (13). That matters because it suggests buyers are still seeing a genuine spread of business models rather than a market dominated by just one operating style.

Compared with the previous monthly snapshot, Queensland listing volume moved from 503 to 516 (+13, 2.6%), while median net income shifted by ,087 to 01,948.

What The Numbers Suggest

Median net income across listings with disclosed figures came in around 01,948, while median remuneration sat near 02,440. Average figures ran higher at 58,914 net income and 30,671 remuneration, which points to the usual pattern: a handful of larger deals continue to pull the headline averages up, while the middle of the market remains more grounded.

Average disclosed letting pool size sat around 25 lots. That does not tell the whole story on its own, but it is a useful reminder that buyers are still weighing operational simplicity against scale. Smaller permanent businesses can remain attractive when wage pressure is elevated, while larger mixed or holiday operations can still command attention where location and upside are strong.

Why This Month Feels Important

The broader backdrop in 2026 continues to matter. Higher financing costs than the ultra-cheap money era are still shaping buyer behaviour, and operators are paying closer attention to resilience, tenure and staffing intensity than they did during the most aggressive growth phase of the cycle. That tends to favour clean businesses with understandable earnings and stable agreement positions.

At the same time, policy and regulatory noise remains part of the investment conversation. Ongoing discussion around body corporate governance, disclosure standards and operating compliance does not appear to be stopping deals, but it is pushing buyers to ask harder questions earlier. In practical terms, better presented listings with clearer operational detail are likely to outperform weaker stock even when headline demand remains healthy.

What Buyers And Sellers Should Watch Next

  • Whether listing volumes continue to build into next month or tighten again after this snapshot.
  • Whether disclosed earnings continue to cluster around the same median band or begin to soften under financing and wage pressure.
  • Whether permanent complexes continue to dominate fresh stock, or holiday and mixed-income opportunities begin to expand their share.
  • Whether macro events such as federal budget settings, interest-rate expectations and consumer travel confidence start to alter enquiry patterns more noticeably.

For now, the Queensland market still looks active, diverse and highly selective. Buyers have choice, but not all listings will be treated equally. Operators and brokers who can present clear numbers, realistic pricing and a believable growth story are still in the best position to capture attention.

This monthly article is generated from live marketplace data captured from TheOnsiteManager and is intended as general market commentary, not financial advice.

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