Queensland averages a 3.9% gross long-term rental yield on a $875,000 median 3-bedroom house, with about $2,800 monthly rent. Yields range widely across the 513 suburbs in our dataset; the city guides below cover the markets investors most often ask about.
Property tax averages 0.2% of value across the state. Regulatory environments vary by metropolitan area, with short-term rental rules in particular being a city-by-city question rather than a state-wide one. Each linked city guide covers its specific regulations, suburb-level yields, and total operating costs.
City Markets Covered in Queensland
- Brisbane Short-Term Rentals Yield 5.0%, but Premium Prices Cap Returns
- Gold Coast Short-Term Rentals Yield 8.6%, More Than Double Long-Term
Browse the dashboard Free preview, every suburb in Queensland
Queensland State-Level Snapshot
How Yields Compare Across Queensland
State-level medians smooth across very different markets. The city guides below show the actual spread, which is often substantial. When more city guides are added, the cross-comparison table here will let you scan yields side by side.
Where to Focus: Cash Flow vs Appreciation
Investors in Queensland typically pick between two strategies, and the right choice depends on what you want from the property.
Cash flow first. If monthly income is the priority, outer Brisbane, Gold Coast, and Sunshine Coast tend to deliver higher gross yields within Queensland. The trade-off is slower price appreciation and (in some markets) softer tenant demand. Use the city guides to find suburbs where the median long-term rental yield clears the area average, then check the suburb-level breakdown for outliers above the city median.
Appreciation play. If long-term capital growth matters more than monthly cash flow, inner Brisbane, premium Gold Coast historically outperform other Queensland markets on price growth (Sydney and inner Melbourne lead the broader national benchmark). Check the after-tax cash flow in the dashboard. Depreciation, mortgage interest, and (for negative gearing eligibility) the marginal tax band can change the picture significantly versus the gross yield.
The dashboard lets you compare both strategies on the same property: switch between long-term and short-term rental modes, and adjust mortgage rate, occupancy, and management fees to match your scenario.
Regulatory Context for Queensland
In Australia, stamp duty is set at the state level and varies significantly. NSW and Victoria are highest, Queensland and South Australia lower. Land tax also varies by state, with thresholds adjusted annually. New South Wales caps non-hosted short-term rentals in Greater Sydney at 180 nights per year. Victoria applies a state-wide 7.5% short-term rental tax from 2025. At the federal level, the ATO allows negative gearing, where rental losses can be offset against marginal income. Body corporate (strata) levies for apartments are not deductible against capital gains but are an operating expense.
Each linked city guide covers the local rules in detail. If you're considering a short-term rental strategy specifically, the city-level regulations matter more than state-level averages. Verify with your local council or planning authority before assuming a market is open for investor short-term stays.
How the Numbers in This Hub Were Calculated
The headline yield figure is the median across every suburb in our pipeline for Queensland, computed from a 3-bedroom house at the median sale price for that suburb. We use a 3-bedroom house as the canonical comparison because it's the most common investment property profile and gives a stable basis for cross-city comparison. The dashboard lets you switch to other bedroom counts and to apartments, where the yield picture often differs substantially.
Rent is asking-rent at current market conditions, not legacy stock rents. Property tax shown here is council rates plus any applicable state land tax, which are assessed on land valuations rather than purchase price, so the rate does not reset when a property changes hands. All numbers update as the underlying pipeline refreshes, typically monthly, so the figures you see today reflect current conditions rather than a static snapshot.
How to Use This Hub
The city links above each open a dedicated guide for that metropolitan area, with suburb-level rankings, cost breakdowns, and break-even analysis between the two rental strategies. Click into the cities most relevant to your investment thesis. The dashboard itself sits at the heart of all of this; every number you see in any guide can be re-modelled with your own assumptions for purchase price, rent, mortgage rate, occupancy, management fees, and tax band.
Explore Queensland in the dashboard
Free preview with suburb-level data, every bedroom count, every property type.
View QueenslandData reflects current market conditions and is updated periodically as the underlying pipeline refreshes. This information is for educational purposes only and should not be considered financial or legal advice. Property markets, regulations, and tax rules change frequently. Always verify current rules with local authorities, your accountant, and your conveyancer before making investment decisions.