Alfredton just put on 16 percent in a single year. That is the kind of number that makes people either pile in or panic, so let me explain what is going on underneath it.
Alfredton is the western growth front of Ballarat, and I do not mean that as marketing fluff. The demographers at .id literally name it as one of the three suburbs absorbing most of Ballarat’s growth out to 2046. The city is going from about 124,000 people now to 164,000 by 2046, and a big slab of those new arrivals are landing right here, in new estates with new schools going in to match.
So the 16 percent is not a fluke, it is a suburb in the middle of a structural growth run. HTAG backs that with a capital growth score of 86 out of 100 and a lower risk score of 91. The catch, and there is always one, is the yield. At 3.5 percent this is a grow-your-equity play, not a fill-your-pockets-with-rent one. More on that below.
A city with more than one engine
Ballarat has quietly turned into one of regional Victoria’s genuine success stories, and it has more than one thing going for it. The state government dropped a GovHub right in the CBD and shifted hundreds of public service jobs down from Melbourne. There is the Ballarat West Employment Zone, a 438 hectare industrial precinct with a freight hub attached. Federation University and a redeveloped TAFE anchor a University Town project worth more than $300 million. And Grampians Health runs the major hospital for the region.
Add it up and you have a city that is a service centre for around 300,000 people across Victoria’s west, forecast to grow about 1.5 percent a year for the next two decades. Alfredton sits on the side of town doing most of that growing. When a council is planning for 17,500 new jobs by 2051 and the population is climbing 45 percent over the forecast period, the suburb soaking up the new families is not a bad place to own a house.
A structural growth run
| 1 year | +16.2% | Running hot |
| 3 years p.a. | +3.3% | Consolidated |
| 5 years p.a. | +7.4% | Strong |
| 10 years p.a. | +7.2% | Long-run engine |
Where the numbers land
What’s being built behind the price
What is pushing it up
- Named by forecast.id as one of the main suburbs absorbing Ballarat’s growth out to 2046.
- Sits in a city growing 45 percent to 2046, from 124,000 to 164,000 people.
- A serious economic base: the GovHub, the Ballarat West Employment Zone, a $300m-plus University Town and the regional hospital.
- Rated 86 out of 100 for capital growth and 91 for lower risk, a rare combination to find together.
What we would keep an eye on
- The yield is thin at 3.5 percent, with the weakest cashflow score in this group at 48 out of 100. The rent will not carry the costs.
- It just ran 16 percent in a year and is sitting at the top of its cycle, so do not bank on a repeat. The forward range is minus 5 to plus 12 percent.
- Affordability has jumped hard, from about 18 years to own in 2022 to roughly 36 now.
Would we put a client here?
For a growth brief, this is one of the more compelling regional suburbs going around. You have got a structural growth story, a named growth front in a city that is genuinely expanding, strong fundamentals, and a low risk score to go with it. That mix is not easy to find.
The honest bit: Alfredton is a pure capital growth play and the cashflow proves it. A 48 cashflow score and a 3.5 percent yield mean you will be feeding this one for a while before the rent catches up. You are also buying after a 16 percent year, so temper the expectations on the next twelve months. If you have got the borrowing power and you want equity growth from a suburb with real wind behind it, Alfredton is a strong pick. If cashflow is king for you, it is not the one.
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