Kingston is the one on this list with a beach. It sits 12 kilometres south of Hobart, wrapped around the hills above Kingston Beach, and it happens to be the seat of one of the fastest-growing council areas in Tasmania. Lifestyle suburbs that also stack up on the numbers are rare, and this is one of them.
The standout here is the cashflow. Kingston has the best yield in this whole report at 4.2 percent, an 89 out of 100 cashflow score, and a rental vacancy rate of just 0.6 percent. People want to live here and there are not enough rentals to go around, which is exactly the pressure you want as a landlord. HTAG rates it 85 overall and 91 for lower risk, so this is a quality, lower-drama suburb, not a punt.
The thing to understand is timing. Kingston has just come through the Hobart correction, which is why its three-year average growth looks soft at 1.3 percent a year. It is steadier than it has been, but you are buying a recovering market rather than a runaway one. Worth knowing before you read the rest.
The southern growth path of Hobart
Kingborough has been quietly one of Tasmania’s growth stories, adding people steadily while the rest of the state crawls. It is essentially the southern growth path of Greater Hobart, and Kingston is its commercial heart. The big near-term mover is Spring Farm Village, a $45 million town centre with a Coles and around twenty shops going in, alongside hundreds of new homes at Spring Farm, which finally gives the suburb a proper retail hub.
There is more substance here than a pretty beach too. The Australian Antarctic Division runs its headquarters out of Kingston, the Channel Highway and Southern Outlet keep it tied tightly to Hobart, and around seven in ten residents own their homes. It is a settled, family, owner-occupier suburb with a coastline, a combination that tends to hold value through the cycle.
Steady, through a correction
| 1 year | +5.8% | Recovering |
| 3 years p.a. | +1.3% | Correction drag |
| 5 years p.a. | +2.9% | Steady |
| 10 years p.a. | +7.5% | Long-run engine |
Where the numbers land
What’s being built behind the price
What is pushing it up
- The best cashflow in this report, a 4.2 percent yield, an 89 cashflow score and a vacancy rate of just 0.6 percent.
- A genuine lifestyle suburb, beachside and 12km from Hobart, that also rates 85 overall and 91 for lower risk.
- Sits in one of Tasmania’s faster-growing council areas, with the southern growth path of Greater Hobart running through it.
- A $45m new town centre at Spring Farm plus hundreds of new homes, and the Antarctic Division HQ anchoring local jobs.
What we would keep an eye on
- It is coming off the Hobart correction, so recent growth has been soft at 1.3 percent a year over three years. You are buying a recovery, not a boom.
- Affordability is stretched, with years to own up from about 28 in 2022 to roughly 40 now.
- Tasmania is a smaller, thinner market, and the forward range is modest at minus 3 to plus 10 percent.
Would we put a client here?
For an investor who wants cashflow and quality in the same package, Kingston is one of the better options we have looked at. The yield is the best on this list, the vacancy rate is rock bottom, the lifestyle pull is real, and the risk score is high. You are getting a beach suburb that also pays its way, which is not common.
The honest read: this is a steady recovery play, not a rocket. Hobart corrected, Kingston came back to earth with it, and the growth from here is likely to be solid rather than spectacular. The forward range tops out around 10 percent and affordability has stretched like everywhere else. If you want rent that genuinely supports the holding costs, a quality lifestyle suburb, and you are happy with steady growth, Kingston is a beauty. If you are chasing maximum capital growth, the Victorian growth-front suburbs will likely outrun it.
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