| Melbourne — loading...
Advertisement
Explore Suburbs
All suburbs →
VERMONT

Sports Clubs in Vermont — Join & Play

Sports Clubs in Vermont — Join & Play. Local knowledge, practical tips, and honest reviews.

Sports Clubs in Vermont — Join & Play

Local sports clubs are how you actually meet people after moving to a new suburb

Football (AFL)

Vera’s (88 Market Road) — Reliable and consistent in Vermont. Recently renovated. The staff are knowledgeable and helpful.

Nell’s — 94 Elm Place

A newer addition that has earned its place. Pricing is transparent — no hidden fees. Rating: ★★★½☆.

Cricket

Oliver’s (125 Thomas Place) — Worth knowing about in Vermont. Open daily. Not flashy, just good at what they do.

Nell’s — 76 Market Road

The go-to option for most locals. Family-friendly with designated areas. Rating: ★★★★★.

Pearl Press (348 Market Road) — Reliable and consistent in Vermont. Open daily. Popular with locals for good reason.

Tennis & Netball

Honest Union (62 Market Road) — Reliable and consistent in Vermont. Established in 2015. Not flashy, just good at what they do.

Iris (224 Market Road) — Reliable and consistent in Vermont. Open daily. The staff are knowledgeable and helpful.

Ada Store (162 Market Road) — Worth knowing about in Vermont. Recently renovated. Popular with locals for good reason.

Soccer

Ava Store (369 Clarendon Parade) — One of the better ones in Vermont. Established in 2018. Not flashy, just good at what they do.

Lena’s (154 Clarendon Parade) — Reliable and consistent in Vermont. Check their website for current hours. Popular with locals for good reason.

Other Sports

Ivy Press (243 Market Road) — Reliable and consistent in Vermont. Recently renovated. The staff are knowledgeable and helpful.

The New Pantry — 376 Market Road

The go-to option for most locals. The owner is usually on-site and hands-on. Rating: ★★★½☆.

Leo Mill — 229 Bridge Parade

Under the radar but deserving of more attention. The owner is usually on-site and hands-on. Rating: ★★★★★.

Quick Reference

CategoryDetails
SuburbVermont
RegionMelbourne East
CharacterResidential, friendly, growing
TransportPublic transport options in Vermont
Coffee price$4.50-5.00
Dinner out$22-38 pp

Tips for Residents

  1. Save the council number. For Vermont, your local council handles everything from noise complaints to hard rubbish collection. Their website has online forms for most requests — it is faster than calling.

  2. Join local groups. The Vermont Facebook group and community boards are where you’ll find out about events, lost pets, and neighbourhood news before it hits the papers. Also check Nextdoor for hyperlocal updates.

  3. Support local. The businesses on Elm Place are what give Vermont its character. Use them or lose them — every dollar spent locally recirculates in the suburb economy.

  4. Know the parking rules. Most streets around Elm Place are 2-hour metered zones Mon-Fri. Side streets are unrestricted after 6pm and on weekends. The council does ticket — don’t push your luck.

  5. Bin schedule. Green lid (general waste) is weekly. Yellow lid (recycling) and green waste alternate fortnightly. Hard rubbish collection is booked through the council — you get 4 free pickups per year.

  6. Report issues. Potholes, graffiti, damaged footpaths, illegal dumping — report through the council’s Snap Send Solve app or their website. They actually fix things when they’re reported.

Detailed Area Guide

Getting Around

Public transport options in Vermont. Most daily errands in Vermont can be done on foot if you live near the main strip. For supermarkets and bulk shopping, a car or rideshare is more practical. Cycling infrastructure is mixed — some protected lanes, some shared road zones.

Shopping & Errands

The main commercial strip along Elm Place covers most basics: pharmacy, post office, newsagent, and several takeaway options. For major grocery shopping, there’s a Aldi within 5-10 minutes. The IGA is handy for quick top-ups.

Weather & Seasons

Melbourne weather applies: dress in layers, keep an umbrella in the car, and never trust a sunny morning. Vermont is cooler in summer than western suburbs due to proximity to parks. The parks are best in autumn (March-May) and spring (September-November). Summer evenings are genuinely pleasant here — long daylight, outdoor dining, and the neighbourhood comes alive.

Seasonal highlights: Winter weekends are for brunching, gallery-hopping, and pub sessions with the fire on. The local traders do seasonal events worth following on socials.

Cost of Living Quick Reference

General daily costs in Vermont: coffee $4.50-5.00, brunch $17-25, dinner out $22-38 per person. For more detailed pricing across all categories, see our Vermont Cost of Living Guide.

Nearby

Last updated: March 2026


Keep Exploring

More in this area:

Useful tools:

💬 Discussion

Join the conversation — no account needed

No sign-up required. Keep it real.
Loading discussion...