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The affordable suburb outperforming all its neighbours—and why savvy investors are taking notice

While surrounding areas command premium prices, one inner-northside pocket is delivering growth and lifestyle at a fraction of the cost.

By Brisbane Property Desk · Published 27 June 2026 at 9:23 pm

2 min read

The affordable suburb outperforming all its neighbours—and why savvy investors are taking notice

Zillmere has quietly become Brisbane's best-kept investment secret, sitting comfortably below the state median of $780,000 while posting growth figures that rival suburbs asking significantly more.

The inner-northside suburb, roughly 15 kilometres from the CBD, is trading median values around $685,000—a gap of nearly $100,000 compared to adjacent Aspley and Strathpine. Yet recent sales data shows Zillmere properties have appreciated at rates matching or exceeding those pricier neighbours over the past 18 months. A three-bedroom brick home on Toohey Street sold for $715,000 in April, representing a 12 per cent uplift from its 2023 purchase price.

"Zillmere's advantage is its position between established infrastructure and emerging opportunity," says local agent commentary. The suburb benefits from proximity to both the Bruce Highway and the upcoming Olympics 2032 transport corridors, while maintaining genuine affordability compared to aspirational postcodes like The Gap or Everton Hills.

What's driving the performance? First-home buyers squeezed out of Grange, Paddington and New Farm are discovering Zillmere's solid bones: solid weatherboard and brick stock, established shopping precincts along Gympie Road, and genuine green space through adjacent bushland reserves. The suburb's state primary school feeds into Aspley State High, while Zillmere Community Centre and local parks provide the lifestyle amenities younger families demand.

The NSW and Victoria migration wave hitting Brisbane is also reshaping buyer priorities. Interstate investors accustomed to Sydney's north or Melbourne's outer stretches find Zillmere's price point and house-and-land offerings immediately appealing—particularly those seeking dual-income household affordability without sacrificing connectivity.

Infrastructure underpinning the 2032 Games is another quiet catalyst. While Olympic venues cluster toward the southside, the broader transport network improvements—particularly busway and rail upgrades across the northside corridor—position suburbs like Zillmere as genuine value-capture plays over the next five to seven years.

Current listings reflect vendor confidence without irrational exuberance. A four-bedroom residence on Chubb Street carries an asking price of $749,000—achievable for serious buyers, yet attractive enough to generate competitive interest.

For investors and first-home buyers tired of premium price-tags for standard product, Zillmere deserves closer inspection. It's doing what good suburbs do: delivering fundamentals—location, affordability, growth—without the hype.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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This article was produced by the The Daily Brisbane editorial desk and covers property in Brisbane. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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