Clarence Valley NSW
Clarence Valley.
SA2 Investor Rankings
Clarence Valley SA3 — Market Narrative
Economic Read
Clarence Valley has delivered a clear structural re-rating over the past decade, compounding at 10.0% per annum against a pre-COVID trend of roughly 4.9% per annum set over the 2014-to-2020 window. Had that earlier trajectory held, the indicative median today would sit around $538k; the actual print is $645k, placing the market $107k above trend, or +19.9% against the extrapolated path. The catalyst has been the post-2020 re-pricing of Tasmania's second city — the Launceston General Hospital, the University of Tasmania's northern campus, advanced manufacturing and a growing tourism base have translated diffuse demand into sustained price formation. The most recent twelve-month print of +5.7% is the ongoing signal of whether the re-rating is still compounding or normalising.
Cashflow is the secondary — and for many investor frames, primary — thesis. Gross yield sits at 4.6% on a median weekly rent of $570, up from $530 a year ago — a +8% shift framed by a rental pool that has struggled to expand at pace with household formation. Days on market at 43 and inventory at 4.0 months describe the current sales channel condition. The arithmetic for an income investor is clean: a sub-$645k entry ticket buying roughly $29,640 of gross annual rent, against SA3 vacancy at 0.0%, produces a yield multiple that Melbourne or Hobart cannot match on equivalent stock. This is the textbook regional-capital cashflow story — with capital growth as an accompanying, not competing, leg.
The risk and positioning backdrop is classically regional. Fully-owned tenure at 49% signals an equity-heavy, low-distress owner base that dampens forced-sale risk through any credit cycle. Buy affordability at 9.6 years of household income remains compressed against mainland-capital multiples, and the Clarence Valley SA3 sits on socio-economic middle ground — a working regional city rather than a distressed or aggressively gentrifying micro-market. The 501km distance from Hobart, combined with Launceston's own employment base, defines the buyer set: patient-capital investors comfortable with a regional Tasmanian lease market, supplemented by lifestyle migration from mainland capitals. The principal headline risk is yield compression should rents plateau — at current vacancy of 0.0%, that compression is not imminent, but watch the SVI trajectory carefully over the next two quarters.
Composite Risk Profile (5 stars = lowest risk / best)
Lifestyle Profile
Constituent Suburbs (3)
Rental Vacancy Trend
SVI & Vacancy Rate 13-month trajectory
Median Weekly Rent SA3 · Mar 2025 → Mar 2026
Vacancy Read
The Suburbtrends Vacancy Index for Clarence Valley has trended tighter across the full thirteen-month window, moving from 100.0 in March 2025 to 93.5 in March 2026 — a -6.5 point shift. The index reading is the single most useful summary of how constrained the rental market is relative to its own base period; a persistent sub-par print signals structural firmness, a persistent above-par print signals genuine easing. For an income-oriented investor, that direction of travel is the relevant signal.
Vacancy-rate dynamics corroborate the index. The rate has oscillated between 0.00% and 4.52% across the window and closed at 0.00%, placing the market firmly in the sub-3% landlord-favourable band. Vacant-dwelling counts ran between 0 and 9 against a listed stock base that moved from 199 to 114. The relationship between vacancy and listed stock is the load-bearing signal — thin vacancy against a stable rental pool is structurally different from thin vacancy against a shrinking pool.
Weekly rents reflect the scarcity cleanly. The SA3 median moved from $530 in Mar 25 to $570 in Mar 26, a +7.5% thirteen-month lift. The trajectory shape — steady-grind versus step-change — is the relevant detail for income underwriting: grinds extend, step-changes retrace. For buyers agents setting client yield assumptions, the current rent print can be held with reasonable confidence through at least the next review cycle provided vacancy does not move through 3% in the opposite direction.
Put together, the rental market in Clarence Valley is landlord-favourable at period close. That status supports the wider investor thesis — tenant depth, low income-default risk from the city's anchored hospital, university and manufacturing employment base, and rent growth broadly tracking ahead of consumer inflation. The risk to monitor is a rapid expansion of regional rental supply — an outcome that current building-approval prints in the Coffs Harbour - Grafton SA4 do not yet signal at scale.
Buyers Market Conditions
Inventory & Median Price Months of supply (bars) · Median sale price (line)
Buyers Agent Read
Clarence Valley has averaged 4.6 months of inventory across the last thirteen months, sitting inside the balanced regime at period close. The distribution is 0 months tight, 13 balanced, 0 in choice — that split defines whether the market has operated as a persistent stock-shortage problem, a persistent oversupply problem, or oscillated between the two. The tightest print came in Mar 26 at 4.0 months, with the current reading at 4.0 months. The thirteen-month arc has been modestly tightening; the most recent prints are the ones worth weighting most for current buyer strategy.
Price action needs to be read alongside inventory. The SA3 median opened the window at $610k, peaked at $645k in 2026-02, and closed at $645k — a +5.7% thirteen-month move. Where inventory and price move in the same direction, the story is clean. Where they diverge — loosening inventory alongside rising price, or tightening inventory against flat price — the tell is scarcity pricing on quality stock while the broader pool slows. That asymmetry is where a buyers agent earns their fee: reading which stock genuinely carries scarcity attributes and which is trading on a scarcity premium that may not hold.
Strategy Implication
For a buyers agent operating in Clarence Valley today, the brief is defined by the current balanced regime. At 4.0 months of supply, the operational emphasis falls on disciplined negotiation and vendor-expectation reading. The newer risk is paying scarcity premium on stock that does not genuinely carry scarcity attributes; the fee is earned by separating the top-decile homes where vendor price expectation is defensible from the long tail trading on aspirational asking ranges. Vendor-expectation lag is the critical variable across any regime — vendors remain anchored to peak prints while the pipeline rotates beneath them.
How a Buyers Agent Earns Their Fee
Stock is the bottleneck. Local relationships and pre-market access decide who buys and who waits another six months. Negotiation room is thin; the win is being first through the door.
Choice is reasonable but not abundant. The skill is knowing how far each vendor will move on price and terms, and reading which listings have private stretch beneath the asking range. This is where disciplined negotiation pays for the fee.
Plenty of stock, easy to be overwhelmed. The risk shifts from missing out to buying the wrong asset. The fee is earned by ruthless filtering — separating quality stock with growth fundamentals from the long tail of compromised properties.
Prepared with
Anthony Butler
When the stakes are high, Anthony Butler is the steady hand that gets Northern Beaches buyers the right asset at the right price. Awarded Buyer's Agent of the Year (2022) at a prominent Sydney firm, he then launched a boutique agency on the Beaches, building a reputation for calm advice, sharp negotiation and rigorous due diligence. He has also led interstate investment purchases across QLD, VIC and SA — experience that sharpened his ability to read cycles, pressure-test assets and move decisively.
Today at FOUNDIT, Anthony brings a refined tech-enabled playbook, clear strategy, deep suburb-and-street insight, access to off- and pre-market opportunities and contract-ready execution — so clients feel informed, supported and in control through every decision.