Realtyex · Wholesale Australian Property · 2026
Greater Geelong Thesis · May 2026

Victoria's
convergence
story.

Greater Geelong is mid-transformation. $30B+ in funded infrastructure sandwiches Lara alone, the LGA absorbs 9.3% of Australia's net internal migration, and Lara houses have compounded at 6.6% pa for nine years — through a pandemic, a rate cycle, and the 2023–24 correction — without the pipeline now in delivery.

Lara · 9-year house CAGR
6.6%
GAEP jobs at buildout
26,500
Lara vacancy · Mar 2026
1.4%
The macro setup

Melbourne trades 13% below itself.

Before zooming into Geelong, the cycle context. Melbourne is the most undervalued capital in Australia. The Geelong trade sits inside a broader Victorian repricing already in motion.

$517K
Melbourne–Sydney gap
Melbourne $826k vs Sydney $1,344k. Widest divergence in 20+ years. ANZ has quantified Melbourne at 13% below its historical Sydney ratio (~78% across multiple cycles).
+6.8%
KPMG · Melbourne 2026
"Comparatively lower price base compared to other capital cities is likely to provide room for further growth and help sustain momentum." — KPMG Residential Property Outlook 2026.
$900K+
Replacement-cost floor
200m² home + median Melbourne land costs $900k–$1m+ to replace. Median dwelling sits at $826k — buyers acquire below cost-to-build. Structural floor under the cycle.
START
HTW property clock
Herron Todd White classifies both Melbourne and Geelong at "Start of Recovery" on the National Property Clock. Optimal entry point — bottom of cycle, before momentum repricing.
Capital city Median dwelling · Feb 2026 vs Melbourne
Sydney$1,344,000+62.7%
Brisbane$1,081,000+30.9%
Perth$989,000+19.7%
Adelaide$923,000+11.7%
Melbourne $826,000 — underdog —

Source · Cotality · ANZ · KPMG · HTW · April 2026

Macro snapshot · Greater Geelong

The numbers that frame the trade.

Geelong is no longer a regional satellite. It is Victoria's second city, the country's most popular interstate-relocation destination, and the engine of the Western Plains industrial expansion.

+86,500
Residents · 2024 → 2034
CBRE estimate. Outpaces Melbourne and broader regional Victoria. Trajectory: 271K (2021) → 348K (2028) → 387K (2034) → 500K (2050) → 1M by 2075.
9.3%
Top regional destination
CBRE Regional Movers Index. Greater Geelong takes 9.3% of all national net internal migration — Australia's #1 regional destination, surpassing Sunshine Coast.
128,600
Dwellings by 2050
State Government mandate. Greater Geelong identified in Victoria in Future as a top-five LGA nationally for population growth — supply pipeline structurally undersized.
4.6%
Unemployment
Down from 4.9% (Mar 2025). Heavy employment growth in defence, health, education, logistics. 22,870+ businesses in the LGA.
The $13B+ infrastructure wave

Capital is already committed.

Council FY2026 budget of $740M ($210M capital works) sits on top of more than $13B in state and federal projects underway or planned. Infrastructure is the most reliable predictor of suburban re-rating — and Geelong has never seen a wave this large.

Greater Avalon Employment Precinct
26,500
Greater Avalon Employment Precinct
3,400+ ha. $3B+ developer commitments planned. 8,000 jobs in initial GAEP West phase (2026–28). 26,500 total jobs at full buildout across GAEP and Avalon Airport. Sectors: advanced manufacturing, logistics, clean-tech, circular economy. Bus Route 18 dedicated link Lara Station ↔ Avalon.
Lara · Jobs at doorstep
Marshall Railway Station
$1B
Regional Rail Revival
$272M South Geelong to Waurn Ponds track duplication — 8km of duplicated track, new Marshall and South Geelong stations, level-crossing removals. Direct uplift to Armstrong Creek and Charlemont commute times.
Geelong metro rail
University Hospital Geelong
$500M
Barwon Women & Children's Hospital
Largest health project in Geelong's history. 23,000m² multi-level facility within University Hospital precinct. Major demolition complete; full delivery by 2029.
Geelong CBD · Health
Deakin University Waurn Ponds campus
$600M
Waurn Ponds Innovation & Healthcare
Anchored by Deakin University (15,000+ students) and Epworth Geelong. New AquaFI Lab and BioFactory opened Oct 2025. Health + education + research corridor 8km from Armstrong Creek.
Waurn Ponds
Nyaal Banyul Convention and Event Centre
$456M
Nyaal Banyul Convention Centre
1,000-seat venue, 200-room Crowne Plaza (Geelong's largest hotel), commercial tower, retail and public plaza. Anchors waterfront revitalisation. Opens July 2026.
Geelong CBD · Tourism
West Gate Tunnel
$10B
West Gate Tunnel
Twin tunnels and second river crossing. Saves ~10 min each way Geelong to Melbourne CBD. Opened December 2025. Compresses the effective Melbourne–Geelong distance.
Melbourne–Geelong link
Avalon defence precinct
$1B+
Hanwha Defence Manufacturing
$170M Armoured Vehicle Centre of Excellence at Avalon. Local production of Redback IFVs and Huntsman SPHs from 2026. 350+ jobs, anchored long-term defence supply chain.
Avalon · Defence
Utility-scale renewables
$2B
Barwon Solar Farm + BESS
330MW solar, 250MW battery — powers 140,000 homes. Plus $400M Little River BESS, $2B Golden Plains Wind Farm (1,330MW, Australia's largest). Geelong = renewable energy capital of VIC.
Renewables hub
Western Plains Correctional Centre
$1.12B
Western Plains Correctional Centre
Victoria's largest maximum-security prison — 1,248 beds in Lara's Barwon Prison precinct. 900 inmates transferred since intake began July 2025. 650+ ongoing jobs anchored to Lara.
Lara · Employment
Geelong Ring Road Employment Precinct
10,000
Geelong Ring Road Employment Precinct
500ha — already delivering tenancies. Largest designated industrial growth area in Geelong. Stages 2–3 nearing completion. 10,000 jobs at maturity. Adjacent to Lara — second jobs anchor on Lara's commute corridor.
GREP · Jobs delivering
— Funded · sequenced · in flight

$30 billion sandwiching Lara.

Add it up around Lara specifically: Avalon $3.3B + West Gate Tunnel $10B + Hanwha $1B+ + Western Plains Prison $1.12B + GAEP $3B+ + Renewables $2B+ + Rail Revival $1B + Coridale + Lara West $600M+. The infrastructure is the single largest medium-term driver of suburban repricing. Lara is sandwiched by funded employment precincts, planned residential corridors, and rail upgrades that are either complete or actively in delivery.

The Realtyex lens

Greater Geelong through six pillars.

Greenfield Convergence Investment Methodology — every market is graded against six structural drivers. Geelong scores in the top quartile on five of six.

01
Pillar 1
Population growth
Adding ~7,600 residents per year at 2.7% pa — above the VIC state average of 1.8%. Armstrong Creek alone is one of Australia's three fastest-growing SA2s outside the capitals (8–10% pa). Path to 1 million residents by 2075 is the longest-duration population tailwind in regional Victoria.
02
Pillar 2
Infrastructure spend
$13B+ pipeline across rail, hospital, defence, renewable energy, airport and university precincts. The hard infrastructure that historically drives suburban re-rating is physically under construction right now — not proposed, not promised, committed.
03
Pillar 3
Supply constraints
Greater Geelong vacancy under 1%; Newtown and Geelong West houses at 0.3%, Belmont and Clifton Springs at 0.4%. State Government wants 77,500 new homes in established areas and 51,100 in greenfield by 2051 — but listings sit 35–45% below the 15-year average.
04
Pillar 4
Land scarcity
Lara is geographically constrained — Avalon Airport buffer west, Princes Freeway corridor north, Corio Bay east, Western Plains prison precinct south. Net result: only Lara West can grow, and it's locked up by Villawood (Coridale) and Austin Land. Scarcity equals pricing power.
05
Pillar 5
Gentrification
Former heavy-industry city is now professional services, defence tech, biotech, aerospace. KPMG, Hanwha, Cotton On, Amazon, Australia Post all anchored at Avalon. Median age of new growth-corridor residents is 29–31 years — young, family-forming, dual-income, owner-occupier depth.
06
Pillar 6
Convergence gap
Armstrong Creek trades at a ~25% discount to Greater Geelong's median house price. Over time, growth corridors compress toward established medians as infrastructure delivers — that gap is the convergence runway. Same logic applies to Lara West vs established Lara.
Suburb deep dive · 01

Lara — the landlocked premium.

The clearest land-scarcity play in regional Victoria. $790,228 median (Cotality, April 2026). A 9-year run at 6.6% pa — beating the Australian long-run benchmark (6.4%) and the Greater Geelong regional average (5.8%). None of those nine years included the infrastructure pipeline now lit.

Coridale by Villawood · Lara West · 1,107 lots · 89ha · land from $338,900 · completion 2028, aligned with GAEP delivering initial 8,000 jobs.
Why Lara, why now
Geographically constrained. Strategically anchored.
Lara is bordered by Avalon Airport to the west, the Princes Freeway and Corio Bay to the east, and the Western Plains / Barwon Prison precinct to the south. The only meaningful land release left is Lara West — and the two largest developers in the country are now sitting on it. $443,120 (Apr 2017) → $790,228 (Apr 2026) = +78.3% / 6.6% CAGR.
  • Coridale (Villawood) — 1,107 lots, 89ha, land from $338,900, smallest lot 350m². 4.5★ across 48 Google reviews. Two future government schools committed. Future town centre with supermarket and retail. Club Coridale residents-only swim/gym/social. Completion 2028 — aligns with GAEP delivering initial 8,000 jobs.
  • Lara West Precinct — 6,000 dwellings · 11,600 residents · 390ha residential growth precinct. Coridale (Villawood) and Lara Lakes (Bisinella) leading delivery.
  • Greater Avalon Employment Precinct — 26,500 jobs at full buildout. 3,400+ ha. Bus Route 18 dedicated link Lara Station ↔ Avalon. 26,500 future workers needing housing within commute distance — Lara is the closest established residential suburb.
  • Western Plains Correctional Centre — $1.12B, 1,292 beds, 650+ permanent jobs. Started intake July 2025.
  • Geelong Line Rail Upgrade — 8km duplicated track, +5/hr peak already delivered. Long-term Avalon rail link in Council priority document.
6.6%
9-yr CAGR · houses
+78.3%
9-yr total gain
+8.5%
12-mo · OnTheHouse · May 25→26
— Vacancy · the long story

21 years of rental data. Below 3% since 2015.

Twenty-one years of monthly rental data. Lara has trended below 3% equilibrium continuously since 2015, with a structural collapse during 2021. March 2026 prints at 1.4% — half of equilibrium. House rents up 5.5% over the past twelve months ($555 → $580/wk).

3.0%
Equilibrium
1.4%
Mar 2026
+5.5%
Rent · YoY
$580
Median rent
— Demographic profile

Owner-occupied 76.1%. Top of region.

A growth corridor with a family base. Owner-occupier rate sits at the top of Greater Geelong — community stability rather than investor exposure. Northern gateway between Melbourne and Geelong: under 15 minutes to Geelong CBD by train, 50–60 minutes to Melbourne CBD.

  • Couples with children47.5%
  • Dominant cohort30 – 39 years
  • Households earning $78k–$130k25.8%
  • Households earning $182k+14.8%
  • Median days on market32 days
Suburb deep dive · 02

Armstrong Creek — Victoria's largest greenfield.

Victoria's largest contiguous urban growth area. 2,500ha. 22,000 homes planned. Population pathway: 15,000 today → 65,000 by 2036. Stockland's Banksia Estate is the flagship.

The convergence trade
25% discount to Greater Geelong. Closing.
Armstrong Creek now trades at $743K median (OnTheHouse AVM, May 2026) — already rebounded +13.4% from the Hotspotting late-2025 trough of $655K. Still a meaningful discount to Greater Geelong's median. As the corridor matures and infrastructure delivers, that gap compresses further. The hard yards are done: schools open, shopping centre trading, $180M Barwon Heads Rd upgrade and $32.5M sports centre under construction.
  • Banksia Estate (Stockland) — 500-home masterplan on 30ha. Premium wholesale spec: 2.7m ceilings, ducted reverse-cycle, stone benchtops, 7-Star NatHERS. Realtyex flagship VIC corridor.
  • Charlemont Rise (Lillrose) — 1,400 lots, $500M, neighbouring corridor.
  • $1B+ Armstrong Creek Town Centre — retail, commercial, employment hub 3.1km from Banksia.
  • 485 house sales in the past 12 months — #1 transaction count in Greater Geelong.
  • Marshall Train Station 4.4km · Deakin Waurn Ponds 8km · Geelong CBD 10.4km · Surf Coast 14km.
  • 6,059 new dwellings approved by 2036 — controlled, staged release. No supply dump.
$743K
Median house · May 26
+13.4%
From 2025 trough
8–10%
Pop growth pa
Banksia Estate by Stockland · Horseshoe Bend Rd, Armstrong Creek · Realtyex flagship VIC wholesale corridor.
Suburb-level data

The Greater Geelong market.

PropTrack via Hotspotting Greater Geelong Location Report (March 2026 — verified by Realtyex). SQM Research is the canonical source for vacancy. Core Realtyex target suburbs highlighted.

Suburb 12mo sales Median house 1-yr growth 5-yr avg Yield Realtyex view
Armstrong Creek 485 $743,137 +13.4% +4% 3.8% Primary · greenfield flagship · rebounding
Lara 412 $790,228 +15.7% +4% 3.8% Primary · landlocked premium · rebounding
Charlemont 145 $635,000 +2% +3% 4.1% Primary · 9,084 dwellings to 2041
Mount Duneed 238 $710,000 −1% +4% 3.8% Primary · adjacent to Banksia
Corio 348 $510,000 +5% +6% 4.3% Watch · gentrification play
Norlane 279 $467,750 +2% +5% 4.3% Watch · supercharged list
Grovedale 261 $680,000 +3% +5% 3.9% Watch · Deakin halo
Leopold 241 $667,000 −1% +5% 3.9% Hold · maturing
Highton 287 $895,000 +3% +4% 3.4% Hold · established premium
Ocean Grove 327 $950,000 −2% +5% 3.3% Pass · lifestyle, low yield
Newtown 142 $1,078,500 −13% +3% 2.8% Pass · established, sub-3% yield
Barwon Heads 67 $1,427,500 −15% +5% 2.3% Pass · coastal premium

Source · PropTrack · Hotspotting Greater Geelong · SQM Research · Mar 2026

15-year forward projection · Lara

Three scenarios. Same starting line.

From the April 2026 base of $790,228, projected forward under three CAGR scenarios. The base case at 7% matches Lara's own historical 9-year CAGR — without crediting the infrastructure pipeline now in delivery.

Scenario CAGR 2031 (5 yr) 2036 (10 yr) 2041 (15 yr) Realtyex note
Conservative 5.0% $1,008,553 $1,287,198 $1,642,827 Floor under worst rate scenarios
Base case · matches historical 7.0% $1,108,336 $1,554,498 $2,180,264 Equals Lara's 9-yr historical CAGR
Optimistic 9.0% $1,215,864 $1,870,757 $2,878,392 Infrastructure-led acceleration

Modelled on $790,228 Apr 2026 base · GCIM framework · projections only · not advice

— Conservative · 5%
$1.64m
By 2041. Floor under worst-rate scenarios.
— Optimistic · 9%
$2.88m
By 2041. Infrastructure-led acceleration.
The Realtyex buy list

Where we're sourcing, watching, and passing.

Three tiers: active wholesale acquisition, watching for cycle entry, and passing on yield-or-growth profile. Read the wholesale explainer →

Active acquisition
Armstrong Creek (Banksia)
$760–820K
Stockland flagship. Wholesale upgraded spec, 350m² lots, $680–700/wk rent, sub-1% vacancy, $1B+ town centre 3.1km away.
Lara West (Coridale)
$680–760K
Villawood masterplan. Landlocked supply, Avalon Airport halo, $1.12B prison precinct anchor, long-term rail link upside.
Charlemont (Charlemont Rise)
$620–700K
Lillrose Developments. 9,084 dwellings approved by 2041. Marshall Station catchment. Direct Banksia spillover.
Mount Duneed
$700–760K
Halcyon and Warralily corridors. 4,256 new dwellings to 2041. Strong owner-occupier depth.
Watch list
Corio
$480–540K
Northern affordability play. 5% 1-yr growth, 6% 5-yr avg. $70M Lynden Estate + $50M Edenville redevelopment driving gentrification.
Norlane
$440–500K
National Top 50 Supercharged Suburbs list. 4.3% yield, 5% 5-yr avg. $120M Norlane Blossom + multi-dwelling subdivision wave.
St Albans Park
$610–680K
9% 1-yr growth, 8% 5-yr avg — strongest 5-year compounder. Tight market, low listings.
Lovely Banks–Batesford
TBD
Northern Geelong Growth Area. 3,783 new dwellings by 2036. Earlier in cycle than Armstrong Creek — pre-evidence stage.
Pass / Avoid
Newtown
$1.05M+
Established premium. 2.8% yield, −13% 1-yr. Owner-occupier market — wrong vehicle for investor capital.
Barwon Heads / Point Lonsdale
$1.2M+
Coastal lifestyle. 2.3% yield. Holiday-home distortion. Capital growth isolated from infrastructure thesis.
Inner CBD apartments
Varies
~300 fast-tracked apartments + 16-storey Malop St tower + Up Property pipeline. Supply wave. Apartments — wrong asset class for our thesis.
Geelong West units
$505K
−10% 1-yr growth. Flat 5-yr. Apartment exposure — no land leverage.
Master thesis · Greater Geelong

The convergence is committed.

Three things converge in one location. Melbourne sits 13% below its historical Sydney ratio with KPMG forecasting +6.8% for 2026 and HTW classifying both Melbourne and Geelong at "Start of Recovery." Greater Geelong is the fastest-growing regional city in Australia, taking 9.3% of net internal migration nationally. Lara is funded into the next decade by $30B+ of state-backed infrastructure, sandwiched by GAEP (26,500 jobs), GREP (10,000 jobs), the Western Plains prison precinct and the delivered Geelong Line rail upgrade.

The base case projects $790,228 today to $2.18m by 2041 at a 7% CAGR — the same rate Lara has already delivered through a pandemic, a rate cycle, and the 2023–24 correction, without the infrastructure pipeline now lit. The replacement-cost floor under current pricing is structural. Vacancy at 1.4% is half of equilibrium. Owner-occupier rate is 76.1% — the top of Greater Geelong, indicating community stability rather than investor exposure.

Inside Geelong, two corridors carry the asymmetric upside. Armstrong Creek — Victoria's largest contiguous greenfield, anchored by Stockland's Banksia Estate, trading at a 25% discount to the Geelong median. And Lara West, a geographically constrained corridor where Villawood's Coridale (1,107 lots, completion 2028) lands precisely as GAEP delivers its initial 8,000 jobs. The Realtyex play: brand-new wholesale detached housing in Banksia and Coridale, on titled or near-title lots, full Div 43 + Div 40 depreciation, entry pricing at or below established equivalents. The convergence is committed. The catalyst is funded. The supply is constrained.

Risk note

Outer-corridor markets are interest-rate sensitive — Armstrong Creek's 2022–24 correction (−5.8% peak-to-trough) demonstrates downside in tightening cycles. Recovery is underway (+1.14% over six months). Investors must hold a 5% buffer above all costs, model conservative growth (6% pa base case), and target a 7–10 year minimum hold. Construction-period interest on land is not deductible (s26-102) — capitalised to cost base. Builder selection is a risk decision — only Tier-1 fixed-price contracts.

The corridors are live

Banksia and Coridale.
Limited titled stock per release.

100+ deals · $82M+ acquired · $13M+ equity manufactured for clients across QLD, NSW, WA and VIC. Realtyex sources at developer-direct wholesale pricing — RP Data, Cotality and bank-val verified — for qualified investors.