Suburb data, rental yields, price growth and market timing across 15,000+ Australian suburbs — decoded in plain English. Free. Instant. No buyers agent fees.
General information only · Not property advice · 15,000+ suburbs
Sample data for illustrative purposes. Ask Perry for live data on any suburb.
Ask Perry about any suburb →Perry gives every Australian access to the same data that professional buyers agents and property investors use to make decisions.
Gross and estimated net rental yields for houses and units in any Australian suburb. Compare yields across multiple suburbs side by side.
1, 3, 5 and 10-year median price growth for houses and units. Identify suburbs with consistent long-term growth vs speculative spikes.
How long properties are sitting unsold. Short days on market = high demand. Longer = buyer's market. Perry tracks this by suburb, postcode and city.
New infrastructure — transport, schools, hospitals, commercial precincts — is one of the strongest predictors of suburb growth. Perry flags planned projects.
Population growth, age profile, owner-occupier vs investor ratio and rental demand indicators — the human side of suburb performance data.
Compare any two (or more) Australian suburbs across all data points side by side. Perry presents the data in plain English, not raw numbers.
Highest-yielding suburbs in 2026 tend to be in regional Queensland, WA and SA — many offering 6–10%+ gross yields. Sydney and Melbourne inner suburbs often yield 2.5–4% but offer stronger capital growth. Perry compares any suburb for you in seconds.
A gross yield of 4–5% is generally acceptable. 5–7%+ is considered strong. Under 3% means you're relying on capital growth. Net yield (after costs) is typically 1–1.5% lower than gross. Perry calculates both for any Australian suburb.
Property can be a strong long-term investment in Australia — historically averaging 6–8% annual growth nationally over 30 years. But performance varies enormously by suburb. Perry analyses the data for your target area so your decision is based on facts, not speculation.
Days on market (DOM) measures how long homes sit unsold before selling. A low DOM (under 30 days) signals high buyer demand and strong market conditions. A high DOM (60+ days) means less competition and more negotiating power. Perry tracks this by suburb.
Negative gearing occurs when rental income is less than property costs — the loss is tax-deductible. It works best when you're in a high tax bracket and expect strong capital growth. In 2026, negative gearing policy is under ongoing review — Perry tracks current rules and implications.
Research rental yield, price growth trend (5–10 years), days on market, vacancy rate, infrastructure pipeline and demographic trends. Perry analyses all of these for any Australian suburb and explains what the numbers mean for your investment decision.
Ask Perry about any Australian suburb — rental yield, price growth, days on market, and what the data really means for your investment decision. Free.
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