Family violence victims will be able to break leases more easily and tenants will have more freedoms under Victorian reforms designed to make renting fairer.

Premier Daniel Andrews announced 130 reforms will be introduced into parliament this week - 10 months after first flagging them ahead of the Northcote by-election.

"These reforms are about making a rental property your home, whether it be pets, picture hooks, other small modifications, getting your bond back more quickly," he told reporters on Sunday.

Every rental home will have to meet basic standards including functioning stoves, heating, deadlocks, gas, electricity and smoke alarms.

Rental bidding will be banned and rent increases will be limited to once a year.

Renters will be given the right to make minor modifications without landlord consent, such as nailing a hook on the wall or installing anchors to stop furniture falling on children.

People will also be able to keep pets with landlords only able to refuse the right of a tenant to have a pet by order of the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal.

The changes will also allow for quicker returns of bonds, which will be capped at four weeks' rent.

Recommendations from the royal commission into family violence will also be included.

"A woman trying to flee abuse can break a lease under these changes without incurring penalties, without there being that extra burden or that extra reason to perhaps feel that you had to say in an abusive, potentially tragic, relationship," Mr Andrews said.

Landlords would not be left out of pocket in such situations, he said, with compensation plans available.

Mr Andrews and Consumer Affairs Minister Marlene Kairouz said the reforms took time to be finalised because of consultation.

There are only four sitting weeks left this year before the state election in November and the upper house has become increasingly combative, especially since police announced they were investigating Labor over its use of parliamentary entitlements in 2014.

Mr Andrews said the reforms passing parliament would be a judgment on the Legislative Council and "whether they value certainty, security and commonsense reform to benefit tenants."

"I would hope they would be motivated to get on, just as we are, to make these changes," he said.

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