You can’t control geopolitics. You can control your operating costs.
When conflict escalates and oil markets react, the ripple effect hits everyday life fast: fuel rises, freight costs rise, trades and materials rise, and inflation finds its way into the most annoying places. For landlords, that pressure shows up as higher maintenance invoices, tighter tenant budgets, and a bigger need for cash buffers.
In that kind of environment, the goal isn’t to “hustle harder.” It’s to protect your margin.
One of the most overlooked margin leaks in residential property is also one of the most controllable: property management fees.
If you’re paying an agent roughly $2,000–$3,000 per property per year (once you include the extra fees that tend to appear), self-management isn’t a lifestyle choice. It’s a financial strategy.
This post will show you how to think about self-management as portfolio insurance, how to transition cleanly without spooking your tenant, and how to run a simple system so you don’t fall back into spreadsheet chaos.
In calm markets, inefficiency is annoying.
In volatile markets, inefficiency is dangerous.
Here’s why the Iran war (and any major geopolitical shock) matters to landlords even if your property is in suburban Australia:
When costs rise across the board, the question becomes:
Where can you reduce expenses without reducing the quality of your tenancy?
For many landlords, the fastest answer is: stop paying for work you can systemise.
Most landlords underestimate how powerful a few thousand dollars per property can be when it’s redirected into a buffer.
A simple midpoint estimate:
That $2.5k isn’t just “extra money.” It’s a cushion against the three things that hurt most in uncertain markets:
If one vacancy costs you $X, how many weeks does $2.5k cover?
Use this quick calculation:
Weeks covered = 2500 Weekly rent
Examples:
Now multiply that by your portfolio:
This is the key mindset change:
If you can keep the same tenant, keep the same rent, and keep the same property condition but reduce your operating costs you’ve increased your resilience without taking on more risk.
The biggest mistake landlords make when switching to self-management is treating it like a breakup.
It’s not a breakup. It’s a handover.
Your goals are simple:
You don’t need drama. You need clarity.
Your termination notice should typically include:
Keep the tone neutral and procedural.
Tenants don’t panic because management changes. They panic because they don’t know what changes.
Your tenant message should cover:
A simple structure:
If you’re planning a rent increase or lease renewal, timing matters.
You don’t want to stack uncertainty on uncertainty.
Practical approach:
In uncertain times, a good tenant is a strategic asset.
Retention is mostly:
Self-management doesn’t mean being “more available.” It means being more organised.
If you self-manage with scattered emails, notes, and spreadsheets, it will feel like work.
If you self-manage with a system, it feels like a small weekly routine.
RentingSmart is designed to be that system, the control panel that keeps your records clean and your workflow simple.
Arrears problems become expensive when they’re discovered late.
A good system helps you:
The goal is early visibility and calm follow-up.
Maintenance is where costs drift when records are messy.
Centralising maintenance requests and outcomes helps you:
Important accuracy note: this isn’t about a “contractor marketplace.” It’s about your own contractor list + job history so you’re not reinventing the wheel every time.
In a volatile economy, you want fewer surprises.
Clean records give you:
This is where self-management stops being “extra work” and becomes margin protection.
When the world feels unstable, the best strategy is often boring:
Self-management, done with a system, is not a hustle move.
It’s a margin-protection move.
If you need proof that this adds up, consider a simple example:
“Erin saved $20k over X years by self-managing.”
That’s not magic. It’s just the compounding effect of cancelling a silent subscription.
If you want to explore this without committing: