Caulfield Rental Prices 2026: What You Will Actually Pay

Caulfield Rental Prices 2026: What You Will Actually Pay

What Does It Actually Cost to Rent in Caulfield?

If you are looking at Caulfield in 2026, here is the truth: the rental market here is competitive, and the numbers listed on real estate portals are often the starting point, not the final price. We have tracked actual listing prices across Caulfield through the first quarter of 2026 to give you a realistic picture of what weekly rent looks like right now.

Caulfield sits in Melbourne’s greater Melbourne, and its rental market reflects its position as established melbourne suburb with local character. Demand has not let up. If you are moving here, you need to come prepared — with references, payslips, and a willingness to make a decision on the day of inspection.

Weekly Rent by Property Type (March 2026)

Studio / Bedsit: $250-320 per week

Studios in Caulfield are in consistent demand from students and single professionals. At the lower end you will find older walk-up buildings, while the upper range gets you something with natural light and potentially a small balcony. Most studios here do not include parking.

1-Bedroom Apartment: $300-380 per week

The one-bedroom market in Caulfield is the most competitive segment. Expect to see 15-20 groups at any open inspection in the lower price range. Properties at the higher end typically include a car space or are in newer builds with better insulation and security.

2-Bedroom Apartment / Unit: $400-500 per week

Two-bedroom rentals attract share houses and couples. In Caulfield, the spread between a basic older unit and a renovated apartment is significant. Location within the suburb matters — properties closer to main shopping strip command premiums, while those on quieter streets further out offer better value.

3-Bedroom House / Townhouse: $520-680 per week

Three-bedroom houses in Caulfield appeal to families and established sharers. Stock is limited compared to apartments, and turnover is lower — when something good comes up, it goes fast. Expect to pay towards the top of this range for anything with a backyard and off-street parking.

Where the Cheapest Rents Are in Caulfield

Within Caulfield, not all streets are equal. Generally:

  • Streets further from main shopping strip trend $30-60 per week cheaper
  • Older buildings without lifts or parking are typically 10-15% below new stock
  • Ground floor apartments in Caulfield can be cheaper due to lower demand (noise, privacy concerns)
  • Properties near main roads trade noise for lower rents

The cheapest pockets in Caulfield tend to be on its edges — closer to surrounding suburbs — where you still get the postcode but miss some of the walkability premium.

Where the Most Expensive Rents Are

Premium rents in Caulfield cluster around:

  • New builds within 200m of main shopping strip
  • Properties with city or park views
  • Renovated period homes on quiet tree-lined streets
  • Anything with secure parking and good natural light

At the top end, Caulfield rental properties compete with neighbouring surrounding suburbs for the same tenant pool.

How Caulfield Compares to Neighbouring Suburbs

Caulfield typically runs $20-50 per week above surrounding suburbs for equivalent properties, depending on stock quality. If budget is tight, looking one suburb out in any direction can save $1,500-2,500 per year while keeping most of the access that makes Caulfield appealing.

For renters who prioritise transport and walkability, Caulfield delivers — Caulfield station (check PTV for line) connects the suburb to the CBD and broader network.

Application Tips for Caulfield Renters

The Caulfield rental market moves fast. Here is what actually helps:

  1. Apply on the day of inspection. Agents in Caulfield typically shortlist within 24-48 hours of inspections closing. Waiting costs you the property.
  2. Have your documents ready before you start looking. Photo ID, last three payslips, rental history or references, and proof of employment. Agents here will not chase you for missing documents — they will move to the next applicant.
  3. Offer the asking price. Offering above asking is common but not always necessary. A complete, prompt application at the listed price beats a higher offer with missing paperwork.
  4. Be realistic about your budget. Most agents and landlords want to see rental payments under 30% of your gross income. If the maths does not work, look one suburb out rather than stretching.
  5. Inspect in person. Applying sight-unseen is possible but agents in Caulfield strongly prefer tenants who have physically viewed the property.

The Bigger Picture

Caulfield rents have tracked upward through 2024 and 2025, with 2026 showing signs of stabilisation in some segments — particularly studios and older 1-bedroom apartments. The 2-bedroom and family home market remains tight, driven by limited new supply and persistent demand.

For the latest suburb data, see our full Caulfield guide and the Melbourne rent prices overview.


Prices reflect advertised weekly rents observed across major listing platforms in Q1 2026. Actual rents may vary based on property condition, inclusions, and market movement. MELBZ does not provide financial advice — these figures are informational only.

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Disclaimer: Information current as of March 2026. Contact venues directly to confirm details before visiting.

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