As a home buyer with a young child, the top essential characteristics of a suburb I am looking for are: 1, School catchment. 2, Safety. After filtering these two, I choose a place where is close to my workplace and affordable. Parks, shops, waters are "good to have" bounces, not essentials.
Your priorities make a lot of sense, especially when you're balancing the needs of your child with the practicalities of daily life. Focusing on school catchments and safety first is a smart approach. Once those essentials are covered, finding a location that's convenient for work and within your budget is key. The "nice to have" features like parks, shops, and water views are great bonuses, but it's clear you've got your priorities straight. Wishing you the best in finding the perfect home for your family! If you ever need advice or have questions, feel free to reach out.
Are we becoming the next Perth? Actually look at the SQM research asking prices? BNE is already higher than Perth. The growth has already been higher than Perth.
Have lived in Chermside 24 years and love it. It is a very safe suburb. Even safer thans most others given the high density apartments meaning there are more people on the streets. The reason the crime stats are high is because it counts all the petty shoplifting that occurs in Westfield Chermside, one of the top 5 busiest shopping centres in Australia. Take out those crime stats and Chermside wouldn't even make the list. The fact Inala is in the top 5 without a major shopping precinct is evident how unsafe the area is.
It’s awesome that you have had a really good experience in Chermside. It sounds like you've built a great life there - 24 years is a long time! You are right that crime statistics can be a little skewed.
1:00 another one of those ancient languages name matching examples. According to Mahabharata and some Puranas, the prince 'Kalinga' founded the Kalinga kingdom, in the current day region of coastal Odisha, India. In Australia, the name Kalinga derives from Aboriginal word Ngalinnga ("ngalin-nga"), probably from the Yuggera language.
I think Tarragindi is the best blue chip Brisbane suburb. Hardly any units, closer to the city than Holland Park, Camp Hill, lush green inner city but getting expensive.
Amazing areas, since 15 mins away from city and incredible walks in Mt Coot-tha and Gap creek Rd. They have a 119.8 growth- just 5% behind the leaders.
Have a look at 19 Marshall Lane Kenmore. Just sold at Auction with exactly the same agent and exactly the same sales method as 2 years ago. Sold 2 years ago for 946K, and just sold for 900K. House is exactly the same. 35K buying costs, 20K selling costs, finance costs with a yield of 4%. That would depend on the buyers circumstances. But overall, a disaster.
Murarrie is a bridesmaid suburb adjacent to Camp Hill mentioned in the video. Murarrie has a cheaper entry point than Camp Hill, Cannon Hill or Morningside.
Hi there! Thanks for your comment! Definitely, every area has its unique challenges, which is why we recommend homebuyers do a thorough research of the neighbourhood before buying…
Your numbers on Chermside are not in any way representative. Someone elsewhere might think personal safety is comparable Chermside vs Inala. It's not. Everything is significantly worse in Inala. Frankly without the knowledge to express this, you don't know Brisbane.
Brisbane is so overpriced. It is a house of cards bubble. No jobs, no infrastructure no source of migration. It is propped up by interstate speculators. Nothing here is factors that keep prices high like you see in Sydney and Melbourne.
The Brisbane property market is currently very hot. But the growth is actually underpinned by a steadily growing jobs market, infrastructure development like Crosse River Rail and the Brisbane Metro, as well as interstate migration. Yes, speculators are there, as in every city, but their impact is too insignificant.
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I’m finding this is a bit misleading - surely you want to buy the suburbs that are lagging, not the ones that have already boomed?
As a home buyer with a young child, the top essential characteristics of a suburb I am looking for are: 1, School catchment. 2, Safety. After filtering these two, I choose a place where is close to my workplace and affordable. Parks, shops, waters are "good to have" bounces, not essentials.
Your priorities make a lot of sense, especially when you're balancing the needs of your child with the practicalities of daily life. Focusing on school catchments and safety first is a smart approach. Once those essentials are covered, finding a location that's convenient for work and within your budget is key. The "nice to have" features like parks, shops, and water views are great bonuses, but it's clear you've got your priorities straight. Wishing you the best in finding the perfect home for your family! If you ever need advice or have questions, feel free to reach out.
Are we becoming the next Perth? Actually look at the SQM research asking prices? BNE is already higher than Perth. The growth has already been higher than Perth.
Completely crazy!
@@MortgageBrokerAustralia So your intro is completely misleading essentially?
Have lived in Chermside 24 years and love it. It is a very safe suburb. Even safer thans most others given the high density apartments meaning there are more people on the streets.
The reason the crime stats are high is because it counts all the petty shoplifting that occurs in Westfield Chermside, one of the top 5 busiest shopping centres in Australia. Take out those crime stats and Chermside wouldn't even make the list.
The fact Inala is in the top 5 without a major shopping precinct is evident how unsafe the area is.
It’s awesome that you have had a really good experience in Chermside. It sounds like you've built a great life there - 24 years is a long time! You are right that crime statistics can be a little skewed.
Yep traffic really good around Chermside too.
1:00 another one of those ancient languages name matching examples. According to Mahabharata and some Puranas, the prince 'Kalinga' founded the Kalinga kingdom, in the current day region of coastal Odisha, India. In Australia, the name Kalinga derives from Aboriginal word Ngalinnga ("ngalin-nga"), probably from the Yuggera language.
Could you do a video on gold coast 2025 please ❤thank you
I think Tarragindi is the best blue chip Brisbane suburb. Hardly any units, closer to the city than Holland Park, Camp Hill, lush green inner city but getting expensive.
Great point! Yeah really good access to the city as well!
Paddington enters the chat.
Next Perth? are you just started to buy properties in the last 6 months or is this video is from 2008
I was looking at the Western suburbs. What about Fig Tree Pocket, Chapel Hill and Kenmore?
Amazing areas, since 15 mins away from city and incredible walks in Mt Coot-tha and Gap creek Rd.
They have a 119.8 growth- just 5% behind the leaders.
Have a look at 19 Marshall Lane Kenmore.
Just sold at Auction with exactly the same agent and exactly the same sales method as 2 years ago.
Sold 2 years ago for 946K, and just sold for 900K. House is exactly the same.
35K buying costs, 20K selling costs, finance costs with a yield of 4%. That would depend on the buyers circumstances.
But overall, a disaster.
Murarrie is a bridesmaid suburb adjacent to Camp Hill mentioned in the video. Murarrie has a cheaper entry point than Camp Hill, Cannon Hill or Morningside.
Really good point! Always about that next suburb along!
Can you do one for Melbourne?
For sure we'll look to do one in the next few months!
If history repeats, which it has in many other areas of finance we are heading for a major correction in Australia's property market.
We were hoping you were going to talk about affordable suburbs
Keep out Redbank/ Ipswich areas . It’s a crime hub
Hi there! Thanks for your comment! Definitely, every area has its unique challenges, which is why we recommend homebuyers do a thorough research of the neighbourhood before buying…
Your numbers on Chermside are not in any way representative. Someone elsewhere might think personal safety is comparable Chermside vs Inala. It's not. Everything is significantly worse in Inala. Frankly without the knowledge to express this, you don't know Brisbane.
Gladstone? Or Agnes waters
She's right townhouses have gone through the roof in Brisbane. The next run will be in houses. So buy houses not units
Very true will be interesting to see what happens the next few months.
Bro i think its the other way around, perth still hasnt grown as much over a 10 year period as brisbane.
With AI into education, school isn't that important. An area with less units or townhouse will be better than inner city always polluted.
Oh my brokers, you are also the main reason for prices to go up, all lies cause fear of missing out in people,
Inner city suburbs are crap, old and run down, not worth the money
Thumbnail looks like you were on a bender
Brisbane is so overpriced. It is a house of cards bubble. No jobs, no infrastructure no source of migration. It is propped up by interstate speculators. Nothing here is factors that keep prices high like you see in Sydney and Melbourne.
The Brisbane property market is currently very hot. But the growth is actually underpinned by a steadily growing jobs market, infrastructure development like Crosse River Rail and the Brisbane Metro, as well as interstate migration. Yes, speculators are there, as in every city, but their impact is too insignificant.
BS
You don't even know how to pronounce Brisbane properly, there's no z
Their pronunciation is fine. I've lived here for 36 years.