Regional Australian residential markets ranked by investor-relevant signals: gross yield, rental momentum, cashflow position, supply tightness, and economic fundamentals. Research tool. Not financial advice.
34 markets · Multi-factor research score · Q1 2025 data
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Crisis-level vacancy and strong cashflow without negative gearing. Lowest absolute entry price in the SA scan. Investment thesis is primarily yield-driven, with any steelworks-related upside treated as optional rather than assumed.
$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.
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.
Central west NSW regional hub with the most attractive yield profile in the NSW expansion set at 4.4%. Dubbo Base Hospital is the major employer; Taronga Western Plains Zoo and agribusiness supply chains support a diversified service economy. Cashflow gap is relatively small ($5k/yr pre-costs) and rent growth at 6.4% is narrowing it. Of the expansion markets, Dubbo has the most achievable path to cashflow breakeven.
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.
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.
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.
Townsville is North Queensland's largest city and a significant ADF hub — Lavarack Barracks (Army) and RAAF Base Townsville. James Cook University and Townsville University Hospital underpin stable public-sector employment. The market has recovered materially from its 2015–2019 downturn. At $595k and $500/wk, cashflow is slightly negative at standard LVR — not the positive-cashflow market it was two years ago, but yield of 4.4% remains competitive for a city of this scale.
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.
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).
Bathurst is a heritage inland NSW city — Charles Sturt University, Bathurst Base Hospital, government services, and the Bathurst 1000 motorsport event. Sea/tree change migration from Sydney drove price growth since 2020. At $665k and $530/wk, gross yield is 4.1% and cashflow is slightly negative. Better yield than Wagga or Albury; more affordable than coastal NSW equivalents. New builds eligible for NG retention.
Geraldton retains the highest yield in the expansion set at 4.5%, with the smallest cashflow gap of the WA markets. The WA cycle has run the price from the $300s to $576k, but rental growth has tracked alongside. Agricultural export hub (grain port), RAAF Base Geraldton, and Mid West fisheries provide a diversified employment base. Slightly negative cashflow — not a yield play at current entry prices, but the most defensible yield profile among the 7 expansion markets.
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.
Orange has moved materially as a lifestyle and sea-change destination for inland NSW. At $745k, the yield of 4.1% no longer supports cashflow-positive investing at standard LVR. The economy is diversified — Orange Base Hospital, Cadia gold and copper mine services, and Charles Sturt University — but the price growth has run ahead of rental income. New builds remain eligible for NG under current policy settings.
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.
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.
Tamworth is the primary service hub for north-west NSW — regional hospital, government services, and agricultural supply chains. The Country Music Festival is a tourism asset but the investment case rests on structural residential demand. At $640k and $453/wk, gross yield is 3.7% — price growth has significantly outpaced rent growth, turning what was an affordable high-yield market into a negative cashflow investment at current entry prices.
Bunbury's median house price at $950k reflects the extraordinary WA resources boom cycle. This market was previously one of the stronger cashflow plays in the dataset — at current prices it is not. Gross yield of 3.0% at $950k is strongly negative at standard LVR. The port, Alcoa alumina operations, and South West regional services provide a solid employment base, but investors entering now face a very different equation to those who purchased 18–24 months ago.
Darwin is the NT capital and a significant ADF hub: RAAF Base Darwin and Robertson Barracks in nearby Palmerston. Charles Darwin University and NT government services provide additional employment stability. At $670k and $711/wk rent, Darwin produces the strongest gross yield in this expansion set (5.5%) and is the only Round 2 market achieving positive cashflow at standard LVR. Vacancy at 2.1% is elevated by dataset standards — directional trend matters.
Albury (NSW) is part of the Albury-Wodonga border region — a Hume Highway logistics hub with Albury Wodonga Health and Border Medical College providing employment stability. At $930k median (NSW side only), gross yield is 3.2% — strongly negative cashflow at standard LVR. The Wodonga (VIC) side has a materially lower median (~$640k) and is a separate suburb and state. Ensure clarity on which side of the border you are assessing.
Cairns is Australia's gateway to the Great Barrier Reef — a major international tourism hub with Cairns Airport as a primary employer alongside healthcare (Cairns Hospital) and government services. Residential rental demand is underpinned by permanent resident workers, not purely tourism workers. At $612,500 and $525/wk, cashflow is slightly negative at standard LVR. Vacancy at 1.1% is tight. Note: broader Cairns LGA median house prices are materially higher than the Cairns City suburb figure used here.
Bendigo at $640k with $510/wk rent produces 4.1% gross yield — the strongest of the two Victorian the Melbourne commuter premium as a backstop. The VIC land tax changes add a holding cost layer for investors with multiple properties. Bendigo Health, La Trobe University, and regional government services provide stable employment anchors. Investment case is long-hold capital growth, not income.
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.
Government-backed tenant quality via ADF DHOAS subsidies. Robertson Barracks is a permanent strategic asset. Vacancy driven by ADF rotations not economic weakness.
Geelong at $904k reflects the Melbourne proximity premium and post-pandemic lifestyle migration run. Deakin University, Barwon Health, NDIS growth, and logistics employment anchor the economy after the Ford closure in 2016. At 3.3% gross yield, cashflow is strongly negative at standard LVR. VIC state land tax changes add holding cost pressure. Investment case relies on Melbourne-correlated capital growth rather than income.
Newcastle's median house price at $1.55M now sits in the range of established capital city suburban markets. The investment case is lifestyle demand, coastal amenity, and employment diversification (John Hunter Hospital, University of Newcastle, defence, knowledge economy) — not yield or cashflow. At 2.5% gross yield, this market requires significant ongoing capital to hold at standard LVR rates. The 2026 NG policy change materially increases holding costs for new purchasers.
| # | 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 | 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 |
| 3 | 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 |
| 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 Crisis-level vacancy and strong cashflow without negative gearing. Lowest absolute entry price in the SA scan. Investment thesis is primarily yield-driven, with any steelworks-related upside treated as optional rather than assumed. | 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 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. | TAS | 5.6% | 1.3% | 62 |
| 12 | Dubbo Central west NSW regional hub with the most attractive yield profile in the NSW expansion set at 4.4%. Dubbo Base Hospital is the major employer; Taronga Western Plains Zoo and agribusiness supply chains support a diversified service economy. Cashflow gap is relatively small ($5k/yr pre-costs) and rent growth at 6.4% is narrowing it. Of the expansion markets, Dubbo has the most achievable path to cashflow breakeven. | NSW | 4.4% | 1.1% | 61 |
| 13 | 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 |
| 14 | 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 |
| 15 | 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. | NSW | 3.7% | 1.0% | 57 |
| 16 | Townsville Townsville is North Queensland's largest city and a significant ADF hub — Lavarack Barracks (Army) and RAAF Base Townsville. James Cook University and Townsville University Hospital underpin stable public-sector employment. The market has recovered materially from its 2015–2019 downturn. At $595k and $500/wk, cashflow is slightly negative at standard LVR — not the positive-cashflow market it was two years ago, but yield of 4.4% remains competitive for a city of this scale. | QLD | 4.4% | 1.2% | 57 |
| 17 | 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 |
| 18 | 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 |
| 19 | Bathurst Bathurst is a heritage inland NSW city — Charles Sturt University, Bathurst Base Hospital, government services, and the Bathurst 1000 motorsport event. Sea/tree change migration from Sydney drove price growth since 2020. At $665k and $530/wk, gross yield is 4.1% and cashflow is slightly negative. Better yield than Wagga or Albury; more affordable than coastal NSW equivalents. New builds eligible for NG retention. | NSW | 4.1% | 1.1% | 55 |
| 20 | Geraldton Geraldton retains the highest yield in the expansion set at 4.5%, with the smallest cashflow gap of the WA markets. The WA cycle has run the price from the $300s to $576k, but rental growth has tracked alongside. Agricultural export hub (grain port), RAAF Base Geraldton, and Mid West fisheries provide a diversified employment base. Slightly negative cashflow — not a yield play at current entry prices, but the most defensible yield profile among the 7 expansion markets. | WA | 4.5% | 1.4% | 55 |
| 21 | 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 |
| 22 | Orange Orange has moved materially as a lifestyle and sea-change destination for inland NSW. At $745k, the yield of 4.1% no longer supports cashflow-positive investing at standard LVR. The economy is diversified — Orange Base Hospital, Cadia gold and copper mine services, and Charles Sturt University — but the price growth has run ahead of rental income. New builds remain eligible for NG under current policy settings. | NSW | 4.1% | 1.2% | 54 |
| 23 | 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 |
| 24 | 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 |
| 25 | Tamworth Tamworth is the primary service hub for north-west NSW — regional hospital, government services, and agricultural supply chains. The Country Music Festival is a tourism asset but the investment case rests on structural residential demand. At $640k and $453/wk, gross yield is 3.7% — price growth has significantly outpaced rent growth, turning what was an affordable high-yield market into a negative cashflow investment at current entry prices. | NSW | 3.7% | 1.0% | 53 |
| 26 | Bunbury Bunbury's median house price at $950k reflects the extraordinary WA resources boom cycle. This market was previously one of the stronger cashflow plays in the dataset — at current prices it is not. Gross yield of 3.0% at $950k is strongly negative at standard LVR. The port, Alcoa alumina operations, and South West regional services provide a solid employment base, but investors entering now face a very different equation to those who purchased 18–24 months ago. | WA | 3.4% | 0.9% | 53 |
| 27 | Darwin Darwin is the NT capital and a significant ADF hub: RAAF Base Darwin and Robertson Barracks in nearby Palmerston. Charles Darwin University and NT government services provide additional employment stability. At $670k and $711/wk rent, Darwin produces the strongest gross yield in this expansion set (5.5%) and is the only Round 2 market achieving positive cashflow at standard LVR. Vacancy at 2.1% is elevated by dataset standards — directional trend matters. | NT | 5.5% | 2.1% | 52 |
| 28 | Albury Albury (NSW) is part of the Albury-Wodonga border region — a Hume Highway logistics hub with Albury Wodonga Health and Border Medical College providing employment stability. At $930k median (NSW side only), gross yield is 3.2% — strongly negative cashflow at standard LVR. The Wodonga (VIC) side has a materially lower median (~$640k) and is a separate suburb and state. Ensure clarity on which side of the border you are assessing. | NSW | 3.2% | 1.1% | 52 |
| 29 | Cairns Cairns is Australia's gateway to the Great Barrier Reef — a major international tourism hub with Cairns Airport as a primary employer alongside healthcare (Cairns Hospital) and government services. Residential rental demand is underpinned by permanent resident workers, not purely tourism workers. At $612,500 and $525/wk, cashflow is slightly negative at standard LVR. Vacancy at 1.1% is tight. Note: broader Cairns LGA median house prices are materially higher than the Cairns City suburb figure used here. | QLD | 4.5% | 1.1% | 52 |
| 30 | Bendigo Bendigo at $640k with $510/wk rent produces 4.1% gross yield — the strongest of the two Victorian the Melbourne commuter premium as a backstop. The VIC land tax changes add a holding cost layer for investors with multiple properties. Bendigo Health, La Trobe University, and regional government services provide stable employment anchors. Investment case is long-hold capital growth, not income. | VIC | 4.1% | 1.3% | 50 |
| 31 | 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 |
| 32 | Palmerston Government-backed tenant quality via ADF DHOAS subsidies. Robertson Barracks is a permanent strategic asset. Vacancy driven by ADF rotations not economic weakness. | NT | 6.0% | 2.8% | 48 |
| 33 | Geelong Geelong at $904k reflects the Melbourne proximity premium and post-pandemic lifestyle migration run. Deakin University, Barwon Health, NDIS growth, and logistics employment anchor the economy after the Ford closure in 2016. At 3.3% gross yield, cashflow is strongly negative at standard LVR. VIC state land tax changes add holding cost pressure. Investment case relies on Melbourne-correlated capital growth rather than income. | VIC | 3.3% | 1.6% | 47 |
| 34 | Newcastle Newcastle's median house price at $1.55M now sits in the range of established capital city suburban markets. The investment case is lifestyle demand, coastal amenity, and employment diversification (John Hunter Hospital, University of Newcastle, defence, knowledge economy) — not yield or cashflow. At 2.5% gross yield, this market requires significant ongoing capital to hold at standard LVR rates. The 2026 NG policy change materially increases holding costs for new purchasers. | NSW | 2.7% | 1.8% | 41 |
Scores are 0–100 composite research indices. Yield: gross annual rent ÷ purchase price. Data vintage Q1 2025. Manually compiled from public sources. Research only. Not financial advice.
Regional Australian residential markets offer a structurally different risk-return profile to capital city markets. Entry prices are lower. Gross yields are higher. In many cases, vacancy rates are materially tighter than comparable capital city inner-ring or fringe markets. The markets in this dataset are not generic regional towns. They are selected for the quality and durability of their employment base: resources, energy infrastructure, defence, agriculture, government services, and university-driven demand. These are not speculative plays on infrastructure announcements. They are markets with active economic activity and measurable rental demand pressure. In 2026, the 2025 federal budget changes to negative gearing eligibility add a further consideration. Markets where cashflow is achievable without relying on negative gearing support carry lower exposure to the policy shift. The majority of regional markets in this dataset are cashflow-positive or near-positive at standard LVR assumptions, which reduces holding cost dependency on tax outcomes.
Each market is ranked using SuburbScanner's multi-factor research model. The model scores markets across seven dimensions: gross yield, rental growth momentum, price-rental spread, supply tightness (vacancy), economic catalyst quality, liquidity (population and transaction volume proxy), and a policy adjustment for budget exposure. The ranking is a research starting point, not a buy list. A high rank indicates that a market performs well across multiple investor-relevant signals simultaneously. It does not account for individual property selection within the suburb, property management quality, financing terms, or personal tax position. Scores are based on Q1 2025 data. Market conditions change. Always verify current rental demand, vacancy, and pricing with a local property manager before transacting.
The dataset spans seven states and territories: Queensland (resource and agricultural corridors), Western Australia (Goldfields and Pilbara), Victoria (energy transition and agricultural hubs), South Australia (minerals and industrial), Northern Territory (defence and remote services), Tasmania (port cities and renewable energy), and New South Wales (remote mining). This geographic spread is intentional. Regional market cycles are often asynchronous: a resource town in Queensland may be at a different point in its cycle to a Victorian agricultural hub or a Tasmanian port city. Cross-state exposure in a regional portfolio can reduce the concentration risk that comes with investing in a single regional economy. Coverage is expanding. The current dataset represents early-access research. Additional markets across NSW, Victoria, Queensland, and Western Australia are under review for future inclusion.
Several markets in this dataset sit adjacent to major infrastructure investment programmes: energy transition projects in the Latrobe Valley, LNG facilities in the Pilbara and Gladstone, defence expansion in Palmerston, and renewable energy investment in Tasmania. These create accommodation demand, but the construction-phase vs permanent employment distinction matters significantly for long-term investment theses.
Read: Regional cities benefiting from infrastructure investment →SuburbScanner uses a multi-factor research model to rank Australian residential markets by investor-relevant signals. Rankings are updated as new data enters the system. The model is a research aid, not a financial product or investment recommendation. Data vintage Q1 2025. Verify independently before transacting.
Read the full methodology →Newcastle, Geelong, and additional regional markets are in progress for the next dataset release. Early access subscribers receive updates as coverage expands.