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Under $600k and Under Pressure: How Melbourne's Rental Crisis Is Reshaping Its Most Affordable Suburbs

In the suburbs where buyers can still get in for under $600,000, a brutal rental market is both pushing tenants toward ownership and squeezing the landlords who remain.

By Melbourne Property Desk · Published 4 July 2026, 7:25 am

4 min read

Under $600k and Under Pressure: How Melbourne's Rental Crisis Is Reshaping Its Most Affordable Suburbs
Photo: Photo by Curtis Adams on Pexels

Median house prices in Melbourne's most affordable corridors are holding below $580,000 — but the rental market strangling those same postcodes is fundamentally changing who buys, who stays, and who walks away. Suburbs including Werribee, Meadow Heights, Frankston North and Doveton are recording asking rents that have jumped 18 to 22 percent since early 2024, according to data compiled by PropTrack for the June 2026 quarter, effectively erasing the financial buffer that once made renting-while-saving a viable strategy in Melbourne's outer rings.

This matters now because Victoria's median house price has settled around $920,000, and with unit prices averaging $620,000 across metropolitan Melbourne, the sub-$600,000 bracket has become the last realistic foothold for first-home buyers not relying on family equity. The pressure is acute: the Victorian Government's Homes Victoria waiting list currently sits at more than 60,000 households, and private rental vacancy rates in the Frankston local government area have dropped to below 1.2 percent — a figure rental advocacy group Tenants Victoria describes as a chronic shortage, not a blip.

The Suburbs Still Under $600k — and What's Happening Inside Them

Werribee, about 32 kilometres southwest of the CBD along the Princes Freeway corridor, has a median house price of approximately $545,000 as of the June 2026 quarter. Streets like Synnot Street and the pockets around the Werribee Open Range Zoo precinct are drawing buyers who six months ago were still renting two-bedroom units in Footscray. Their motivation is straightforward: a two-bedroom rental on Duncans Road in Werribee now averages $410 a week, up from around $330 in mid-2024. A mortgage on a $540,000 purchase with a 10 percent deposit, at current variable rates near 5.9 percent, costs roughly $430 a week — barely more than rent, and building equity rather than a landlord's balance sheet.

Meadow Heights in Melbourne's north, tucked between Broadmeadows and Campbellfield near the Hume Highway, tells a similar story. Median prices there sit around $520,000. The suburb lacks the infrastructure glamour of inner-city postcodes — there's no Camberwell Junction or Chapel Street strip — but the Craigieburn rail line extension has made it functional, and the Real Estate Institute of Victoria recorded clearance rates above 68 percent in Meadow Heights at June 2026 auctions, a figure that would have seemed implausible three years ago.

Landlords in these corridors are caught in their own bind. Rising land tax thresholds introduced under the 2025 Victorian Budget have squeezed investors holding multiple properties, and several local property managers report that small landlords — those owning one or two investment properties — have been selling into the current market rather than absorbing higher holding costs. That sell-off, paradoxically, creates buying opportunities for owner-occupiers while simultaneously reducing the rental stock available to tenants who cannot yet buy.

What Tenants and Buyers Should Do Now

For tenants stuck in lease agreements in suburbs like Doveton or Frankston North, the Tenants Victoria hotline — reachable at 03 9416 2577 — remains the primary resource for understanding rent increase notice requirements under the Residential Tenancies Act 1997, which mandates 60 days written notice for any increase. Landlords must also wait at least 12 months between increases under current Victorian law, a protection that not every tenant in outer-suburban Melbourne knows they hold.

First-home buyers targeting the sub-$600,000 bracket should move quickly on the state government's HomesVic shared equity scheme, which allows eligible buyers to purchase with as little as a 5 percent deposit without paying lenders mortgage insurance, provided the property price stays under $950,000 — a threshold these suburbs comfortably clear. Applications for the 2026-27 round open in September. For a buyer in Werribee or Meadow Heights, combining that scheme with the Federal Government's Help to Buy program, currently before the Senate for final passage, could cut upfront costs by a further $30,000 to $50,000. The window is real. But it is not open indefinitely.

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This article was produced by the The Daily Melbourne editorial desk and covers property in Melbourne. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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