In a four-bedroom house, in one of Brisbane's wealthiest areas, I shed my shoes at the door of Percy's* place. He welcomes me in and shows me around.
"This is the bedroom ... the walk-in wardrobe ... the guest room," he rattles off. "I had someone staying here the last couple of weeks."
On the same street, a $1.75 million house - a newer home - sold around the same time he moved in. But Percy pays nothing. He doesn't own the place. He's not renting or house-sitting either. He has been squatting in someone else's house for seven months.
See inside the squatter’s home in the short documentary:
"I'm sort of a bit out of place like I'm walking around in disguise," the 34-year-old says.
The first few nights he slept here, "I would just wake up and laugh."
Percy was once a paying renter in the same place before moving on to a new rental. But when he found it had been left empty for months, he moved back in.
"I would say the place is nice; I'm not sure everyone would agree."
Having lived there before, he already knew the house was not in great condition, with mould on the ceiling, holes in the floor, and water damage splotched throughout the place.
Percy pottering throughout the house he's been squatting in for seven months. Credit: SBS The Feed
And with rents rising in most capital cities across Australia last year, he felt motivated and justified to give it a shot.
In Brisbane, rent increased 9.1 per cent last year, according to the latest Domain Rent Report from January.
He says that if tax incentives like negative gearing support can support property investors, this is his way to "take something back".
Percy's kitchen setup. Credit: SBS The Feed
"I reconciled myself to being a renter in the first place ... then I realised maybe there was another way and I just went for it."
The move would also free up somewhere else for someone else, he reasons.
"It sounds sort of silly, but I just wanted to have the space, that sort of freedom that I wouldn't otherwise be afforded renting or share housing."
Percy in his four-bedroom house. Credit: SBS The Feed
The furnished house is almost passable as "normal" until you clock the bottles and barrels of water scattered through the rooms.
While there's electricity, he doesn't have running water and showers using a pot of water instead.
And for a toilet ... there are buckets.
"I just squat over the top, and then just throw some sawdust, cover it like a litter tray, like a giant human cat," he says.
The waste becomes compost for his garden.
What are the laws around squatting?
In Australia, it may not be illegal for a squatter to enter a property if it looks abandoned and the doors are unlocked. If the door isn't unlocked, the squatter could be criminally charged for breaking and entering. If a property owner asks a squatter to leave and they stay, they are trespassing.
Why do these laws even exist? John Bui - a principal lawyer at JB Solicitors in Sydney, said Australia's squatting laws exist to encourage mindful and efficient use of the land, with owners having obligations of their own to maintain a property.
"If they're not maintaining that land, and they've abandoned the property, then it'd be a waste not to allow someone else to use it," he said.
In Australia, a claim for the title could be possible under adverse possession laws in all Australian states if a person has managed to squat there long enough - 12 years in all states, bar Victoria, where it is 15 years. There is no provision for adverse possession in the ACT and NT.
All Australian states have adverse possession laws or 'squatter's rights'. There are no such rights in the ACT and NT. Credit: SBS The Feed
He renovated, changed the locks and put renters in the place for 20 years - so essentially had them squatting for him.
In 2018, he won the title to the house, and he sold it in 2020, making $1.4 million.
A Sydney property developer won the title to this $1.4 million house under squatter's rights in 2018. Credit: SBS The Feed
There can also be trouble for owners to push them out, and for some people like Emma Cook, it can pose a safety concern.
Emma came home late one night after being away on a short trip and found a man living on the front of her property.
"We heard this mighty scream, this piercing scream of my sister, and she ran out and said, 'there's a man, there's a man'. My sister was crying, I started crying," she said.
Emma Cook said her run-in with a squatter left her uneasy about personal safety. Credit: SBS The Feed
"It was just an innate fear of coming home. I'd always make sure I'd leave lights on," she said, adding that while everyone "has the right to a roof over their heads" - this was not the way to do it.
Emma installed a security camera and removed all the bushes around her property to quell some uneasiness. But with her husband going away often for work, it took months for her to feel okay with being alone with her daughter.
"It did actually affect me for quite a time afterwards."
Australia's empty houses
There could be up to 136,000 empty houses in Australia, according to recent estimates from the Australian Bureau of Statistics.
There have been some attempts to reduce this number in Australia, including a vacant land tax on residential properties in parts of Victoria.
But Professor Cameron Parsell from the University of Queensland says, "Fixating on the empty houses is just a distraction."
"I don't hold great hope that we can solve homelessness or the housing crisis by merely intervening in the empty houses.
"We need to eliminate the need to squat by ensuring that all citizens have access to housing that's affordable."
James can't afford a rental, so he's squatting instead
Over two months, The Feed contacted over a dozen people who had squatted or were squatting - and the reasons why they did it were mixed.
One pensioner in regional Victoria said he would be homeless if he weren't squatting, with only one option on the rental market he could afford. Some did it to save money for a property deposit, and others did it as an act of rebellion.
With the secretive nature of it all, there is very little research into how many people are squatting in Australia.
James* and his partner are squatting to avoid sleeping rough. Source: Supplied / Lee Chantler/ SBS The Feed
James* falls into this category.
"Across the road is a big tent city," James tells me from the woman's centre-turned-squat we're standing in.
Gesturing roughly toward the street, he says: "It’s this or out there."
The women's centre has been empty for years, James says. He knows because he used to walk past it occasionally and note its vacancy without giving it much else thought. That is until he found he could not afford a new rental.
"We were just down the road. We were desperate for shelter," he tells me as we stand inside the abandoned property he's been squatting in for a year with his partner. "We’ve just cleaned it up since."
The property shares a fence with a public school, who he says knows of their stay.
"I think they prefer us being here. When we ran into it, it was just a mess, there were syringes everywhere, the entire place was open," he says.
In the biggest room, now their living room, long-life food and a portable gas cooktop are as close as they can get to a kitchen without electricity and running water.
He showers at the 24-hour gym he belongs to.
If these places are just sitting there, I don't see why not.James*
There are makeshift barricades fashioned from slabs of different materials around the place to prevent people from jumping through windows and the roof. Break-ins and wanderers are inevitable in abandoned spaces, but the blocks have helped, James says.
James previously worked regularly as a forklift driver, but when shifts dried up and he was moved on from his last accommodation, he quickly found himself out of options.
"I feel like s--t. This is not what I wanted to do. But we stayed here," James says. The plan is to find stable work and save enough money for a bond to return to the rental market.
"I'm working again but it's just not enough."
When he has enough money to put a bond down for a rental or is kicked out, whichever comes first, they'll move out. But until then, he's posting callouts on social media, hoping to "pay it forward" to someone else in need of housing.
"I don't see why not. If these places are just sitting there, I don't see why not."
*Not their real names.