Two properties. Quietly losing ~$5k–$6k a year in fees. Then fuel jumps again. Groceries creep up. Insurance doesn’t get cheaper. And suddenly that “set and forget” property management fee starts to feel less like convenience… and more like a second mortgage repayment.
If you’re a landlord with a small portfolio, there’s a simple reality: you can’t control global prices, but you can control the leaks in your own cashflow.
This is the simplest, lowest-drama way to terminate your property manager in Australia, take back control, and self-manage without turning your life into a second job.
Most landlords don’t mind paying for value. What hurts is paying for costs you can’t see.
Here’s a practical breakdown of where agency costs commonly show up (your agreement will vary):
|
Fee type |
What it’s for |
Why it adds up |
|---|---|---|
|
Ongoing management fee |
Day-to-day admin, rent follow-ups, tenant communications |
Usually a percentage of rent, so it rises as rents rise |
|
Letting/leasing fee |
Finding a tenant, processing applications, lease setup |
Often charged each time there’s a new tenancy |
|
Lease renewal fee |
Renewing a lease or issuing paperwork |
Can be charged even when the tenant stays |
|
Routine inspection fees |
Periodic inspections and reports |
Multiple inspections per year = recurring cost |
|
Maintenance coordination / markups |
Organising trades, managing repairs |
Where invoices can drift upward without you noticing |
|
Admin charges |
Statements, postage, “misc” fees |
Small line items that compound over time |
Let’s keep this simple and conservative.
That’s not “extra money.” That’s money you already earn—currently being shaved off.
The fee isn’t always the problem. The invisibility is. Most landlords don’t see the leak until cost-of-living pressure forces an audit.
Terminating a managing agency agreement doesn’t need to be dramatic. The goal is to exit cleanly, protect the tenant relationship, and ensure you receive every document and record you’ll need.
Before you send anything, pull up your signed management agreement and look for:
If you can’t find the agreement, request a copy from the agency.
Think of handover like changing accountants: you want a complete file, not a partial one.
Request and confirm you will receive:
Tip: ask for these in a single digital folder as well as any originals.
Keep this neutral and procedural. You’re not arguing. You’re executing a contract.
A simple structure works:
Example tone (not legal advice):
“This is notice of termination of the managing agency agreement in accordance with clause X. Please confirm the effective termination date and the handover process, including delivery of keys, tenancy documents, ledger, inspection reports, and maintenance records.”
A tenant’s main fear is confusion: “Who do I pay? Who do I contact? Will this affect my lease?”
Your tenant notice should cover:
Keep it short. Reassure them. Avoid oversharing.
The first month is where most landlords either build confidence, or create chaos.
Use this simple 30-day plan:
If you’re unsure about your contract terms or your obligations, get advice, don’t guess. A clean exit is cheaper than a messy one.
The biggest reason landlords hesitate to self-manage isn’t capability, it’s fear of admin sprawl.
You don’t need to become a property manager. You need a simple system that keeps everything in one place.
That’s where RentingSmart fits: the boring admin that protects your margin.
When you self-manage, you want to be able to answer, instantly:
A clean ledger prevents misunderstandings and gives you confidence in tenant conversations.
Cost-of-living pressure makes expense control non-negotiable.
When every invoice is recorded properly, you can:
Most landlords don’t fear self-management, they fear tax time.
A system that keeps income and expenses organised throughout the year turns tax reporting from a scramble into a routine.
Instead of maintenance scattered across texts, emails, and missed calls, you want one channel.
Centralising maintenance requests reduces stress, improves response times, and creates a clear record if disputes ever arise.
Important note: If you’re comparing tools, be careful with wording like “rent collection.” Many systems (including landlord-focused tools) are built around rent receipting/tracking and recordkeeping, not taking tenant payments directly. What matters is that your records are accurate and your workflow is simple.
When fuel, groceries, and insurance rise, most people look for a side hustle.
But landlords often have a simpler option: stop paying $2k–$3k per property per year for work you can systemise.
You can terminate your property manager, exit cleanly, keep your tenant calm, and run your rentals with a process that doesn’t consume your life.