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PLENTY

Plenty Property Market (2026) — Prices, Trends, Outlook

Property market overview for Plenty. Median house and unit price estimates, local amenity data, infrastructure.

Plenty Property Market (2026) — Prices, Trends, Outlook

Plenty Property Market Overview (2026)

Plenty sits in the affordable outer-suburban market. This is value territory. Prices are lower than inner Melbourne because the suburb is still developing its amenity base, but growth corridors tend to appreciate as infrastructure catches up.

Price Estimates

Property TypeEstimated MedianMonthly Mortgage (est.)*
House$550K–$850K$2,200–$3,400
Unit/Apartment$350K–$500K$2,000–$3,000

Estimates based on Plenty’s market positioning. Mortgage estimates assume 20% deposit, 6.5% variable rate, 30-year term. For current sales data, check REIV or Domain.

What Drives Property Value in Plenty

Property prices in any suburb reflect three things: what is already there, what is coming, and how easy it is to get to the CBD. Here is how Plenty stacks up:

Amenity FactorPlentyImpact on Value
Schools2Limited
Parks25High — green space is a premium driver
Dining & Cafes3Developing
Medical1Gap
Supermarkets0None — drives value down
Gyms & Fitness1Some options

Total amenity score: 42. Growing infrastructure — early buyers may benefit from appreciation as the suburb develops.

Schools (Key Value Driver)

Plenty has 2 schools — school zone boundaries are one of the strongest price drivers in Melbourne property:

SchoolAddress
Morang South Primary School77 Gorge Road
St Thomas the Apostle Primary School251 Diamond Creek Road

Check zone boundaries at findmyschool.vic.gov.au.

Rental Market

Unit TypeWeekly Rent (est.)
1 Bedroom$260–$360
2 Bedroom$350–$450
3 Bedroom$450–$600

Rental yield estimate: 4.5–5.5% (higher yields in more affordable suburbs).

See our detailed Cost of Living Guide for full cost breakdown.

Before You Buy in Plenty

  1. Check school zonesfindmyschool.vic.gov.au determines your designated school
  2. Review planning overlays — heritage, flood, bushfire at your local council
  3. Check flood riskplanning.vic.gov.au
  4. Attend auctions — quoted ranges in Plenty are guides, not guarantees
  5. Get a building inspection — non-negotiable for any house purchase
  6. Talk to locals — knock on a neighbour’s door. They will tell you what agents won’t
  • Domain — current listings and recent sales
  • realestate.com.au — price history and suburb profiles
  • REIV — quarterly median prices (the official data)
  • ABS Census — population and demographic data

Last updated: March 2026. This guide is refreshed when OpenStreetMap data changes — new openings, closures and corrections are reflected automatically. Found something wrong? Let us know.

Sources

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