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Best investment suburbs Australia 2026

Australian residential markets ranked by investor-relevant signals: gross yield, vacancy rate, rental momentum, cashflow position, supply tightness, and policy exposure. Structured research. Not a consumer property report.

Residential houses onlyQ4 2024 / Q1 2025 dataResearch only. Not financial advice.
20
Markets ranked
Residential houses, Australia
15
Cashflow-positive
Of markets in dataset
5.9%
Avg gross yield
Unweighted dataset mean
1.1%
Median vacancy
SQM-sourced estimates
16
Sub-1.5% vacancy
Rental pressure threshold

Full market ranking

20 markets · Scored 0–100 by investor-relevant signals · Q4 2024 / Q1 2025

Research context

What makes a suburb investment-grade in 2026?

The 2026 federal budget proposed material changes to negative gearing and capital gains tax treatment, subject to final legislation. If legislated as proposed, these changes would shift the conditions under which an investment property stacks up. In this environment, the markets that screen well combine structural yield (6%+ gross), genuine rental pressure (vacancy below 1.5%), and cashflow resilience that doesn't rely heavily on negative gearing as a subsidy. Markets with these characteristics are scored higher across SuburbScanner's research model. Markets where the investment case is primarily speculative — driven by price growth expectations, media coverage, or NG-dependent cashflow — are weighted down.

Regional vs capital city markets in 2026

Capital city markets are largely absent from this screen. In most capital city contexts, gross yields are compressed below 4%, vacancy rates are elevated in inner-ring unit markets, and entry prices create cashflow challenges that are difficult to offset. Regional residential markets, by contrast, are showing structural rental pressure in areas with diversified employment bases and limited new housing supply pipelines. This is not a cyclical observation — it reflects the geographic mismatch between where Australians are choosing to live and work, and where residential investment supply has historically concentrated.

How SuburbScanner ranks these markets

Each market is scored across a set of investor-relevant research dimensions: rental demand, supply tightness, affordability, cashflow position, market momentum, policy context, and liquidity. Scores are aggregated into a single 0–100 index for ranking purposes. The model is not a price forecast and does not constitute financial product advice. It is a structured research tool designed to help investors narrow the field faster and identify markets worth deeper due diligence. All data is manually sourced from publicly available references and reflects Q4 2024 to Q1 2025 conditions.

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Methodology

SuburbScanner uses a proprietary multi-factor model to rank Australian residential markets by investor-relevant signals. The model is designed as a research aid to help investors identify markets worth investigating further. It is not a financial product or investment recommendation.

Read the full methodology →
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