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Rent records5 min readUpdated 12 July 2026

What should an Australian rental ledger include?

A rental ledger is not just a list of payments. For a self-managing owner, it is the evidence trail that explains who paid, who received the rent, which rent period was covered and what is still outstanding.

Core fields to capture every time

The exact receipt and record rules vary by state and payment method, but a useful ledger should be complete enough to explain the rent position without relying on memory.

  • Property address and tenancy reference
  • Tenant or payer name
  • Owner, rental provider or receiver name
  • Payment date and amount received
  • Rent period covered and paid-to date
  • Payment method and receipt number where relevant
  • Balance, arrears or credit after the payment

Why the paid-to date matters

The paid-to date shows the date rent is covered up to. It is often more useful than only recording the payment date because owners, tenants and advisers can see whether the tenancy is actually ahead, current or behind.

Do not overwrite old rent records silently

If a record needs correction, the safer product pattern is to keep an audit trail: what changed, who changed it, when it changed and why. RentalKey should treat rent edits as evidence-sensitive changes, not ordinary text edits.

Practical takeaway

Build the ledger so it can answer one question quickly: what rent was due, what was paid, what period did it cover and what evidence supports it?

This guide is general product education for Australian rental owners. It is not legal, tax, financial, emergency or official government advice. Owners should confirm obligations with the relevant state or territory authority and professional advisers.