Burnie
TASTier 2Positive
62
Signal score
VS
Wagga Wagga
NSWTier 3Negative
57
Signal score

Research only. Not financial advice. Data: Q1 2025 indicative estimates from public sources. Verify independently.

Burnie: Yield Advantage
5.6% vs 3.7%
Burnie: Lower Entry Price
$445k vs $800k
Burnie: Better Cashflow Position
Positive vs Negative
Burnie: Budget Policy Resilient
No NG required (proposed changes pending legislation)
Wagga Wagga: Lower Investor Awareness
Unknown vs Emerging

Burnie offers a materially higher gross yield (5.6% vs 3.7%), making it the stronger income candidate at current prices. Burnie achieves positive cashflow without negative gearing support, while Wagga Wagga requires additional tax offset or rental growth to break even.

Research context only. Not financial advice. Both markets carry distinct risks specific to their location, employment base, and economic profile. Read the individual suburb research pages before drawing conclusions. All policy references reflect proposed changes subject to final legislation.

Metric
Burnie
TAS · #11
Wagga Wagga
NSW · #15
Gross Yield5.6%3.7%
Vacancy Rate1.3%1%
Median Price$445k$800k
Weekly Rent$480/wk$570/wk
Net pre-costs pa+$1,820$-11,960
CashflowPositiveNegative
Rent Growth 12m+5.5%+5.8%
Price Growth 12m+4%+7.2%
NG DependenceNoneHigh
Discovery StatusEmergingUnknown
Population20k65k
Cycle StageStartingEarly
Policy Impact▲ UPGRADED▼ DOWNGRADED
Signal Score62 / Tier 257 / Tier 3
Burnie

Supply-constrained port city with positive cashflow and declining vacancy. Renewable energy and transmission infrastructure investment continues to support regional economic activity and worker accommodation demand.

Wagga Wagga

Wagga Wagga is inland NSW's largest city and a significant ADF base — Kapooka (Army Recruit Training Centre) and RAAF Base Wagga. Charles Sturt University and Wagga Wagga Base Hospital underpin a diversified employment base. At $800k median with $570/wk rent, the gross yield of 3.7% produces clearly negative cashflow at standard LVR. The investment case is employment stability, tight vacancy, and long-term capital growth — not income.

Burnie: Sources

CoreLogic TAS Q1 2025 · REIT Burnie median Q4 2024 · SQM Research postcode 7320 · Port of Burnie throughput report 2024 · Tasmania Renewable Energy Plan 2024

Data vintage: Q1 2025

Wagga Wagga: Sources

realestate.com.au Wagga Wagga median house Jun 2025–May 2026. Data quality: imported.

Data vintage: 2026

The interactive tool lets you add up to 4 suburbs for a full side-by-side breakdown with score components.

Research only. Not financial advice. Data vintage Q1 2025 (indicative estimates from public sources). Verify all metrics independently with local property managers and licensed advisers before making any investment decision. All negative gearing and budget policy references reflect proposed changes subject to final legislation. Consult a registered tax adviser for personal tax position.