Condition reports in Tasmania
A condition report is the written and photographic record of a rental's state at the start of your tenancy — and again at the end. In Tasmania it's one of the most important documents you'll deal with, because it's the baseline every bond decision is measured against. Consumer, Building and Occupational Services (CBOS) oversees how tenancies and bonds work in the state.
Get the Tasmania answer — ask RenterIQ free →Why the condition report decides your bond
When you move out, the property is compared to how it was at move-in. If your entry report clearly shows a mark, stain or wear was already there, it can't fairly be charged to you. If there's no record, it's your word against the landlord's. That's why a thorough, timestamped, room-by-room report at move-in — and a matching one at move-out — is the single best thing a renter in Tasmania can do to protect their bond.
What makes a condition report hold up
Strong reports are detailed and photographic: every room, every surface, with timestamps so the date can't be questioned. RenterIQ builds exactly this — a guided, room-by-room report with timestamped photos you can export — and at move-out it lines your photos up side-by-side against move-in so any dispute is easy to settle.
Consumer, Building and Occupational Services (CBOS) — official renting information · phone 1300 654 499. They set and publish the exact rules that apply to your tenancy.
Common questions — Tasmania
Condition reports are a standard and important part of renting in Tasmania; Consumer, Building and Occupational Services (CBOS) sets out how they fit into the tenancy and bond process.
Every room and surface, the cleanliness and any existing damage, and clear timestamped photos. The more thorough it is, the harder it is to dispute later.
Yes — timestamped before/after photos are the strongest evidence in a bond dispute. They turn "your word against theirs" into a clear, dated record.