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31 suburbs with rental yields over 10pc

By Jack Needham & Elyse Perrau
09 April 2015 | 10 minute read
Risinghouses

More than 30 locations across the nation have rental yields greater than 10 per cent, with all but one of the states and territories offering the impressive returns.

Figures from CoreLogic RP Data show that every state and territory apart from the Australian Capital Territory has suburbs offering double-digit returns, with results strongly skewed towards tourism towns.

The figures also reinforce reports concerning the tightening rental yields in Australia’s most populous and most expensive sales market, Sydney.

The top-performing suburbs in this set of results are locations susceptible to seasonal fluctuations, including the tourism-based economies of South Australia’s Port Vincent (first nationally with a yield of 19.16 per cent), Tasmania’s Bicheno (ranked second with a yield of 14.2 per cent) and the New South Wales town of Huskisson (fourth, with a recorded yield of 14.14 per cent).

LJ Hooker Port Vincent property manager Vickie Easther said the rental yield was 4 per cent in February 2014.

“There has been more investor activity due to lower interest rates and existing holiday house owners looking for income to support mortgages,” she told Residential Property Manager.

“[It is also a] lifestyle choice for tenants to be located on the coast, if their work is located within a 30km radius.”

Not one of New South Wales’ top 10 suburbs was within Greater Sydney.

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With the exception of Broken Hill, almost all of the highest-performing suburbs were on the state’s south and central coasts.

In total, New South Wales has nine suburbs offering rental yields above 10 per cent – the most of any state or territory.

These include: Huskisson (14.14 per cent), Mossy Point (13.25 per cent), Killcare (12.87 per cent), Manyana (11.4 per cent), Minnamurra (11.14 per cent), Broken Hill (11.02 per cent), Malua Bay (10.95 per cent), Rosedale (10.79 per cent) and Berrara (10.41 per cent).

The release of new lots and house-and-land packages in the newly established suburb of Zuccoli, 8km from Darwin’s CBD, resulted in that suburb recording a yield of 14.18 per cent for third spot in the Australian market.

Away from the coastal tourism markets, mining towns continued to place in the top ten performers of the resources states.

Nowhere is this more apparent than in Western Australia, where the state’s top five suburbs are all reliant on the industry.  

These suburbs were Withers (11.94 per cent), Kambalda West (10.82 per cent), Nickol (10.16 per cent), Port Hedland (9.48 per cent) and South Boulder (9.09 per cent).

The Australian Capital Territory was the only market with a first-ranked suburb returning a yield below 10 per cent.

That’s a continuation of a long-term market trend: according to SQM Research, vacancy rates have been on a steady upward trajectory since 2012 with landlord competition increasing as a result.

Scullin was the ACT’s strongest performer with a quarterly rental yield of 7.83 per cent.

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