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.
20 markets · Scored 0–100 by investor-relevant signals · Q4 2024 / Q1 2025
| # | Market | State | Yield | Vacancy | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Moe / Newborough 6.5% gross yield at $385k equals strongly positive cashflow without needing negative gearing. Keppel's $10B AI data centre (Australia's largest announced) remains almost entirely unpriced in local property. Construction worker accommodation demand alone will tighten vacancy before residents follow. Budget policy renders negative gearing irrelevant here. | VIC | 6.5% | 0.9% | 74 |
| 2 | Gladstone Three LNG trains, a dedicated hydrogen export strategy, and a port that handles 100+ million tonnes per year. Yield at 6.1% is cashflow positive. Rent growth +7.5% is second-strongest in the scan. Hydrogen projects add option value on an already-sound investment thesis. | QLD | 6.1% | 0.8% | 73 |
| 3 | Emerald Tightest vacancy in the scan at 0.7% (effectively full). 6.1% yield at $390k is genuinely positive cashflow. Emerald sits at the intersection of coking coal and agriculture, giving it more diversification than a pure mining town. Discovery status 'Unknown': no institutional attention yet. | QLD | 6.1% | 0.7% | 73 |
| 4 | Mackay 6.0% yield is cashflow positive. Mackay is the service hub for Australia's most productive coking coal basin. FIFO workers create reliable accommodation demand. Vacancy at 0.8% is very tight. $590/wk rent on $515k price sits well in positive cashflow territory. | QLD | 6.0% | 0.8% | 70 |
| 5 | Broken Hill 6.7% yield at $235k, the highest yield-to-price ratio in the scan. The Far West NSW REZ (2.3GW) is creating permanent construction and operational jobs in a town that was in structural decline. Cashflow positive by $3,380/year. Discovery status 'Unknown': no institutional awareness of the REZ catalyst yet. | NSW | 6.7% | 1.0% | 70 |
| 6 | Rockhampton 5.7% yield is cashflow positive. Rocky is one of QLD's largest regional cities with genuine economic diversification: military, agriculture, government services, and retail. Rail upgrade and beef industry investment support medium-term employment stability. | QLD | 5.7% | 0.9% | 69 |
| 7 | Morwell 5.7% yield is cashflow-positive at 6.5% rate and improves as rent grows at +5.5%pa. Keppel data centre catalyst is literally next door: Morwell is the primary accommodation suburb for the construction workforce. New build lots available at <$420k all-in, still NG-eligible under budget rules. | VIC | 5.7% | 1.0% | 68 |
| 8 | Kalgoorlie-Boulder 6.4% yield on a 30,000-population regional city with Australia's largest open-cut gold mine as anchor employer. Gold price at USD 2,300+/oz makes operations deeply profitable and workforce stable. Rent growth +7.0% outpacing price growth +8.0%. Liquidity is better than typical regional at this price point. | WA | 6.4% | 0.8% | 68 |
| 9 | Whyalla Vacancy at 0.5% is crisis-level tight. GFG Alliance DRI steelworks ($750M committed) is adding 700+ permanent jobs to a town of 21,500: an enormous relative impact. Price has already moved +12% in 12 months but yield still sits at 6.2%. Supply is constrained by geography. Positive cashflow without NG. | SA | 6.2% | 0.5% | 64 |
| 10 | Karratha $650/wk rent at $490k is one of the best risk-adjusted yield profiles in Australia for a town with genuine long-term employment. Woodside's Pluto LNG trains are 30+ year assets. Cashflow positive by $8,320/yr pre-cost. High income residents make for reliable tenants. | WA | 6.9% | 1.2% | 63 |
| 11 | Burnie 5.6% yield at $445k is cashflow positive. Burnie is a port city with difficult topography limiting new housing supply, and SQM vacancy at 1.3% is declining. Renewable energy projects coming online 2025–2026 will require worker accommodation. Price growth subdued (+4%) makes entry relatively low risk. | TAS | 5.6% | 1.3% | 62 |
| 12 | Mount Isa 8.5% yield, the highest in the scan. $520/wk rent on $320k generates $10,400/yr positive pre-cost cashflow at 80% LVR. Glencore's George Fisher mine extension commits production through mid-2030s. Copper demand in EV/renewable transition provides medium-term mine life visibility. | QLD | 8.4% | 1.5% | 60 |
| 13 | Toowoomba 5.0% yield on Australia's largest inland city (175,000). Inland Rail makes Toowoomba a permanent logistics node: structural demand, not cyclical. Wellcamp Airport's freight capacity is genuinely unique. Vacancy at 1.0% is tight for a city this size. | QLD | 5.0% | 1.0% | 58 |
| 14 | Port Pirie 5.6% yield at $272k (the lowest absolute entry price in the scan) is cashflow positive. Nyrstar's $500M smelter upgrade secures permanent employment. Discovery status 'Unknown' means no institutional competition. Price growth +8.0% already reflecting some catch-up but starting from very low base. | SA | 5.6% | 1.2% | 57 |
| 15 | Launceston 5.0% yield sits just inside cashflow-negative territory but rent growth at +5%pa tips it positive within 2 years. UTAS CBD relocation is a genuine structural demand shift: 10,000+ students moving to walkable CBD precinct. Strong liquidity for a regional city (68,000 population). | TAS | 5.0% | 1.1% | 56 |
| 16 | Alice Springs 6.3% yield at $490k is clearly cashflow positive. The dominant employer (Pine Gap) is a permanent US-Australian defense facility on a 70+ year lease, making it arguably the most recession-proof employment base in the scan. Federal housing investment is improving stock quality. | NT | 6.3% | 2.0% | 55 |
| 17 | Shepparton 5.0% yield on a 64,000-population city with Australia's largest tomato processing facility and a $400M hospital rebuild underway. The Food Valley precinct is creating permanent food-tech employment. Rent growth +5.0% will push to cashflow-positive within 18 months. | VIC | 5.0% | 1.4% | 54 |
| 18 | Mildura 5.1% yield at the crossroads of three states. Mildura benefits from genuine cross-border rental demand that tightens vacancy independent of any single industry. Hospital expansion creates permanent healthcare employment. Rent growth +5.0% will push to cashflow-positive within 12 months. | VIC | 5.1% | 1.3% | 54 |
| 19 | Ballarat 4.4% yield is below cashflow-positive threshold but offers population scale (117,000), transport links (1hr to Melbourne CBD), and the best asset liquidity in the VIC set. Federation University provides student rental demand. Included as the defensive, lower-risk option. | VIC | 4.4% | 1.5% | 50 |
| 20 | Palmerston 6.0% yield and strongly positive cashflow despite 2.8% vacancy. Palmerston is the residential suburb for Robertson Barracks, Australia's largest Army base. ADF personnel rotations are the primary vacancy driver, not economic weakness. As ADF housing policy shifts toward private market, structural demand increases. | NT | 6.0% | 2.8% | 48 |
Scores are 0–100 composite research indices. Yield: gross annual rent ÷ purchase price. Vacancy: SQM Research estimates. Median: CoreLogic / PropTrack. Data vintage Q4 2024 / Q1 2025. Research only. Not financial advice.
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.
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.
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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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.
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