Have you ever walked past one of the Melbourne suburbs streets and found one half of it all at once concealed? It is a sudden thing, but it is certainly not an overnight occurrence. And then, without any press release or announcement, they start buying. By the time the rest of us notice something’s going on — when the sold stickers start appearing on old weatherboard houses and the demo permits start popping up — Melbourne suburbs developers are already three steps ahead and sitting on the land they wanted. The same postcodes keep surfacing. The same planning amendments keep quietly moving through the system. The same kinds of sites keep changing hands at prices that make you look twice.
Why Is Melbourne Such a Big Deal for Melbourne Suburbs Developers Right Now?
Melbourne added 142,600 new residents in the 2023–24 financial year and that’s the biggest population gain of any Australian city. More than Sydney. More than Perth. We’re talking about the equivalent of an entire Ballarat or Bendigo — appearing in Melbourne in a single year.
Now here’s where it gets uncomfortable: the housing pipeline is moving in the opposite direction entirely.
| Supply Metric | Figure | Source |
| Total redevelopment pipeline | 158,533 dwellings | Victorian Government UDP 2025 |
| Currently under construction | 25,371 dwellings | Victorian Government UDP 2025 |
| Greenfield lots titled in 2024 | 18,543 lots (↓ from 22,727 in 2023) | Victorian Government UDP 2025 |
| Apartment approvals (recent quarter) | 567 units — near 20-year low | Cassaform / ABS |
| Victoria dwelling approvals vs 10-yr avg | 15% below average | ABS Building Approvals |
| Completions forecast for 2025 | Lowest in 10 years | Property Update / ABS |
| National housing target shortfall (FY25) | ~77,000 dwellings (32% gap) | Oxford Economics / ABS |
For developers who can access capital and navigate planning? Competition is thin, motivated sellers are everywhere, and whatever gets built is virtually guaranteed to find demand.
Has Melbourne Been Underperforming Other Cities?
The median dwelling value in Melbourne only went up by 14.3% over the 5 years. At the time Melbournes median dwelling value was not growing as fast, as the rest of the country the rest of the country was doing really well.
| City | 5-Year Price Growth | Current Median House Price |
| Perth | ~70% | Above Melbourne |
| Brisbane | ~60% | ~$1,010,566 |
| Adelaide | ~55% | Above Melbourne |
| Melbourne | 14.3% | ~$947,000 |
Melbourne’s median house price is now lower than Brisbane’s — a historic reversal that would have seemed absurd to anyone back in 2019.
But here’s how Melbourne Suburbs Developers read that: Melbourne is a catch-up trade. They’re buying today at prices that reflect years of underperformance, on the thesis that by the time their projects complete in 2–4 years, Melbourne’s recovery will be well underway.
The forecasters seem to agree:
| Forecaster | House Price Forecast | Unit Price Forecast |
| KPMG | +6.6% in 2026 | +7.1% in 2026 |
| Domain | $1.11M by end FY26 (+6%) | +5% to $584,400 |
| Westpac | +10% in 2026 | — |
That’s not a small call. And it’s not coming from optimists — it’s coming from institutions that run very serious models.
What’s This Activity Centres Program Everyone Keeps Mentioning?
The Victorian Government has designated 60+ train and tram station precincts across established Melbourne as “Activity Centres.” In these zones, medium and high-density residential development gets fast-tracked. Eligible projects can be approved without going through VCAT — which is a genuinely big deal, because VCAT delays can kill a project’s feasibility entirely.
The Housing Statement Reform Act received Royal Assent in March 2025, and planning lawyers have described it as a fundamental rewrite of Melbourne’s development framework. Here’s a quick snapshot of selected Activity Centre designations and what they mean for Melbourne suburbs developers:
| Suburb / Station | Max Height (Core Zone) | Train Line | Key Developer Signal |
| Hampton | 16 storeys | Sandringham | Premium bayside — highest proposed heights |
| Kew Junction | 16 storeys | Tram Route 48 | Affluent inner-east, previously untouched by density |
| Hawthorn | 16 storeys | Lilydale/Belgrave | 5-min peak services post-Metro Tunnel |
| Oakleigh | 16 storeys | Cranbourne/Pakenham | Metro Tunnel uplift + Monash employment hub |
| Carnegie | 12 storeys | Cranbourne/Pakenham | Activity Centre + Metro Tunnel line |
| North Brighton | 12 storeys | Sandringham | Coastal premium, active developer land race |
| Glenferrie | 12 storeys | Lilydale/Belgrave | 5-min peak services, Swinburne adjacency |
| Box Hill | 48 storeys (existing ACZ) | Lilydale/Belgrave + SRL | State priority — $1B+ committed |
| Sunshine | High-density RGZ | Airport Rail Hub | National Employment Cluster designation |
| Frankston | Pilot centre | Frankston Line | Hospital anchor + high-rise already approved |
| Preston | Pilot centre (Bell St) | Upfield Line | Mixed-use approvals underway |
Here’s the investor angle: when land gets rezoned from low-density residential to activity centre zoning, its value can jump 30–80%. Melbourne suburbs developers know which suburbs are next in line. They’re buying before that uplift is priced in. The window to do the same as a retail investor is narrowing.
Why Is Everyone Talking About Footscray?
The median house price is still under $1 million. There is no other Melbourne suburbs at this distance from Melbourne’s city centre with a house median below seven figures. That anomaly is what developers are quietly closing. You might have seen some recent price data that looks alarming — house prices down 2.9% over 12 months, units down significantly more.
Here’s what’s actually happening: the unit market is absorbing a large volume of new apartment supply all settling at once. The house market is a completely different story. Melbourne suburbs developers who understand this distinction are buying land and house sites — not competing in the apartment pipeline.
Box Hill Is Already Expensive — Is There Still an Opportunity?
Box Hill already operates under the Activity Centre Zone. It has a confirmed Suburban Rail Loop station. The adjacent corridor suburbs share the same infrastructure upgrade but haven’t moved as sharply yet:
| Adjacent Suburb | Rail Line | Activity Centre | Why It’s Interesting |
| Blackburn | Lilydale/Belgrave | Designated | 5-min peak services, family suburb |
| Nunawading | Lilydale/Belgrave | Designated | Lower entry point than Box Hill |
| Mitcham | Lilydale/Belgrave | Designated | Same train frequency, less profile |
| Ringwood | Lilydale/Belgrave | Pilot centre (original 10) | Major retail + transport interchange |
| Glen Waverley | Glen Waverley Line | Designated | Proposed height increases, strong Asian community demand |
Same trains. Lower entry price. Worth paying attention to.
What’s Going On in Coburg?
Coburg has a 0.8% rental vacancy rate. That’s among the lowest in all of Melbourne — a sign that rental demand is running well ahead of supply. It’s 8km from the CBD on the Upfield line. And it’s receiving one of the most concentrated single development commitments of any Melbourne suburb outside the city centre.
Here’s the catch though, and it’s worth being clear-eyed about: the development pipeline in Coburg is heavily skewed toward apartments.
| Product Type | Pipeline Volume | Risk Level |
| Apartments | 786 in pipeline | High — oversupply risk on settlement |
| Townhouses | 20 in pipeline | Low — constrained supply |
| Houses | 16 in pipeline | Low — constrained supply |
If you’re considering Coburg, the house and townhouse market — where supply remains genuinely tight — is a very different conversation from the apartment market. That distinction matters a lot here.
Why Are Reservoir and Preston Getting So Much Attention?
Reservoir and Preston form a gentrification corridor running up the Upfield line from Northcote. Both recorded some of Melbourne’s strongest two-year price appreciation (8–15%) as level crossing removals completed and station precincts were upgraded.
Preston is a designated pilot Activity Centre — specifically the Bell Station corridor — with Commercial 1 Zone and Residential Growth Zone rezonings already approved under GC252. Multiple mixed-use developments have been approved along Bell Street and Sydney Road.
Are Tarneit and Werribee Worth Considering?
If you’re looking for a fundamentally different kind of opportunity — volume rather than boutique uplift — the answer is yes.
The Wyndham LGA grew by 4.2% in a single year — one of the fastest local government growth rates in Australia. Both Tarneit and Werribee have matured well beyond their early reputation as distant housing estates. Research consistently finds that sustained commute-time reductions of that magnitude drive 5–15% property value uplift along the affected corridor.
How Do I Spot Developer Activity Myself Before Prices Move?
You don’t need industry contacts or special access. The signals are all publicly available — you just need to know where to check.
| Signal | Where to Look | What It Means |
| Planning permit clusters | Council website planning registers | Melbourne suburbs developers actively accumulating in the area |
| Activity Centre designation | VPA Interactive Status Map | Planning pathway materially improved |
| Rezoning amendments | Planning Vic weekly email updates | Upcoming zoning changes before media coverage |
| Land vs dwelling price growth | CoreLogic / PropTrack suburb reports | Developer competition for sites is active |
| VicTrack land releases | Victorian Government announcements | High-strategic-value locations identified early |
The most underrated of these is subscribing to Planning Vic’s weekly update emails. It’s free. It’s dry. And it will tell you about rezoning changes before they’re reported anywhere else.
What Should I Actually Buy — And What Should I Avoid?
Melbourne suburbs developers activity in a suburb doesn’t mean all property types there will perform equally. This distinction matters more than most people realise.
Worth buying
Houses in Melbourne suburbs where apartments are the main developer play — like Footscray and Coburg — are also a smart move. All that apartment construction actually makes house supply tighter, not looser. You get the suburb’s upside without the oversupply headache.
And land in corridors where TOD rezoning is actively moving through the planning pipeline? That’s where the biggest jumps happen — sometimes 30–80% in value — before a single brick is laid.
Worth avoiding
When Coburg’s 786 pipeline apartments all settle at once, or Box Hill absorbs 1,900+ new units from Vicinity Centres alone, existing apartment owners suddenly find themselves competing against brand-new stock. Apartments in outer corridors like Tarneit, Pakenham, and Craigieburn are a different problem. The people moving there want houses and townhouses — not apartments. Demand is softer, yields compress, and resale gets harder. The house market in those suburbs is a different story entirely.
Has Victoria’s Tax Environment Changed? What Do I Need to Know?
Yes — significantly. Any investment model built before 2024 needs a serious refresh.
| Tax Change | Previous Rule | New Rule (from 2024) |
| Land tax-free threshold | $300,000 | $50,000 (from 1 Jan 2024) |
| Fixed fee per notice | None | Up to $975 per notice |
| Additional levy | None | +0.10% for properties over $300,000 |
| Vacant Residential Land Tax | Inner/middle Melbourne only | Statewide (from 1 Jan 2025) |
The impact is most painful in low-yield outer suburbs where the land tax cost relative to rental income really bites. In higher-yield or higher-growth inner locations, the fundamentals still stack up — which is probably why investors now account for 32% of Victorian housing finance, up from 27% three years ago, despite all these changes.
The lesson: the investment case in Victoria is still strong enough to absorb the tax burden — but only in the right locations. Getting the Melbourne suburbs right matters more than ever.
FAQs
- Are Melbourne property prices actually going to recover in 2026?
The forecasting consensus is unusually strong on this one. KPMG is projecting 6.6–7.1% growth. Westpac is calling +10%. Domain forecasts the median house price reaching $1.11 million by end of FY26. The combination of record-low supply, record-high population growth, and years of underperformance creates a genuine catch-up case. - Do I need to be a developer to benefit from developer activity in a suburb?
Not at all. The whole point of watching developer behaviour is that it’s a leading indicator. By the time cranes appear and projects are being marketed, the easy gains are usually already gone. - Is the Activity Centres rezoning guaranteed to happen in all 60+ suburbs?
GC252 has already legally rezoned the first 10 pilot centres — that part is done. The next 25 and further 50 are committed government policy, but “committed” and “legally enacted” are different things. The pilot suburbs have the most certainty right now; the later tranches carry more timing risk. - What if I can’t afford the inner suburbs?
Good news — you don’t have to. Not second in place are Glastonbury, at 832,000 with an annual increase of 11.7, and Werribee, at 620,000 with a yield of 4.2. - How do I know if my suburb is next for rezoning?
Two free tools — five minutes to set up. Check the VPA’s Activity Centre Interactive Status Map and subscribe to Planning Vic’s weekly emails. You’ll hear about rezonings before they hit the news. That’s genuinely useful. - Is now a good time to buy in Melbourne?
The people with the most money and the best research teams are already buying. Supply is the lowest it’s been in a decade. More people are moving here than ever. And prices have been flat long enough that something’s got to give.
Disclaimer: This report is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Always seek professional advice before making property decisions.






































