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SEAHOLME

Seaholme for Young Professionals — 2026

Seaholme for Young Professionals — 2026. Local perspective with real data and honest opinions.

Seaholme for Young Professionals — 2026

This is the no-spin guide to Seaholme for young professionals aged 22-35. We live in Melbourne, we visit these suburbs regularly, and we have no stake in making anywhere sound better than it is.

Rent & Affordability

A 1-bedroom apartment in Seaholme runs $280-370/wk. Very affordable — you get genuine value here compared to inner-city options.

Sharehouses are the budget move: $180-280/week for a room in a 2-3 bedroom place. The quality of sharehouse stock in Seaholme is mixed — newer apartments are better, older places can be rough. Check Flatmates.com.au, Fairy Floss Real Estate, and the local Facebook groups.

Budget reality check: On a $65-80K salary (typical for 25-30), you can comfortably afford Seaholme in a sharehouse. Solo renting requires $80-100K+ depending on your savings buffer.

Social Scene

The social life in Seaholme is unpretentious, multicultural, value-driven. Oak Parade is the main strip for after-work drinks and weekend brunch — within a few blocks you’ll find 8 bars/pubs and 11 cafes.

The bar scene is active Thursday through Saturday — most places have happy hour 5-7pm. Expect to spend: pint $10-12, cocktail $15-20, dinner for two with drinks $153.

Meeting people: Coworking spaces if you WFH — instant professional network. Seaholme is the kind of suburb where your barista knows your name after a week.

Transport to CBD

Public transport options in Seaholme. The commute to the CBD is 15-20 minutes — competitive with inner-city suburbs but with more space for your money.

Cycling: Dedicated bike lanes on Oak Parade make this a legitimate cycling suburb. Bike storage in apartments is hit-and-miss — check before signing a lease.

Late night: Transport frequency drops after 9pm on weeknights. Uber/DiDi are the backup — budget $15-25 to the CBD after midnight.

Working from Seaholme

A few cafes are genuinely laptop-friendly — reliable WiFi, power outlets, and staff who don’t hassle you. There’s at least one coworking option nearby, with hot desks around $20-35/day. The local library also has free study spaces and WiFi.

Most young professionals here mix between WFH, the office, and cafe-hopping. The suburb’s walkability makes this lifestyle work — you can do morning gym, coffee, work, lunch, and evening drinks without getting in a car.

Fitness & Active

Gym options: A couple of 24/7 gyms plus outdoor boot camps in the park. The running paths along Bourke Street are popular morning and evening. The local pool is affordable at $6-8 per swim.

Young Professional Budget — Seaholme

ExpenseMonthly (solo)Monthly (share)
Rent$1213$967
Groceries$426$382
Dining & drinks$425$444
Transport$158$152
Gym/fitness$60$72
Utilities & internet$197$137

Day-to-Day Living in Seaholme

The daily rhythm in Seaholme starts with coffee runs to the main strip. By mid-morning, the cafes are full and Oak Parade has its usual foot traffic — people who clearly work from home and need to get out.

Groceries & essentials: There’s a Coles within 10 minutes, plus 3 smaller specialty food shops for when you want better produce. The weekend farmers market is worth the early alarm. Most residents do a mix of supermarket runs and local shop top-ups.

Internet: NBN coverage in Seaholme is FTTC primarily — decent speeds of 50-100Mbps on most plans. If you work from home, confirm the connection type before committing to a rental.

Council & bin collection: The council app makes reporting issues easy — potholes, graffiti, dumped rubbish. The local library is a genuine community asset — free WiFi, study spaces, events, and kids programs.

Quick Stats — Seaholme

MetricValue
RegionMelbourne Greater Melbourne
CharacterUnpretentious, multicultural, value-driven
Rent (1br)$280-370/wk
Coffee$4.00-4.50
Dinner out$18-32 pp
TransportPublic transport options in Seaholme

Nearby Suburbs

Last updated: March 2026


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