The Honest Truth About Living in Melton
Every suburb in Melbourne has a PR team. The real estate agents, the council brochures, the developer websites — they’re all selling you a version of Melton that doesn’t mention the bad stuff.
Here’s what they won’t tell you. And here’s what they’re right about.
I’m telling you this because I’d want someone to tell me before I signed a lease or put in an offer.
First Impressions
At 35km from the CBD, you’re firmly in the ‘plan your city trips’ territory. Melton is a 12,500-person suburb that looks exactly how you would expect for its price point. Your first drive through will either make you think “yeah, I could live here” or “this isn’t for me.” Trust that instinct.
The Good Stuff
Your money goes further here. $618,864 buys you a proper house with a backyard, a garage, and space to breathe. Try getting that for twice the price 20km closer. The financial breathing room alone changes your quality of life — less mortgage stress means less life stress.
New infrastructure is coming. Melton is growing fast, and that means new schools, shopping centres, and road upgrades are either planned or already underway. Growth corridors get government investment because they need it, and that investment tends to arrive faster than people expect.
The community is young and growing. With a population of 12,500, Melton is full of families in the same life stage. Your kids will have plenty of classmates, and the local sports clubs are thriving. There is something genuinely nice about living in a suburb where everyone is building their lives at the same time.
Weekend space. Parks, walking trails, and actual open sky. After years in a tiny apartment, the space alone is worth the commute. Kids can play in the backyard, you can have a proper barbecue, and your dog has room to run.
Grocery competition. Growing suburbs attract Aldi, Costco, and discount stores. Your weekly shop is often cheaper out here than it is in the inner suburbs. The retail infrastructure in growth areas has improved dramatically over the past five years.
The Not-So-Good
The commute is the commute. There’s no getting around it. 87-105 minutes each way, five days a week. That’s 14-17 hours of your life each week sitting in traffic or on a train. Over a year, that adds up to hundreds of hours you will never get back.
Everything requires driving. Want to grab dinner? Drive. Need to see a doctor? Drive. Friend’s birthday in Fitzroy? That’s a 45-minute drive plus $20 parking. Two-car households are the norm here, and that second car costs $5,000-8,000 per year in insurance, registration, fuel, and maintenance.
The construction never ends. Growing suburbs mean construction trucks at 7am, half-finished estates, and temporary traffic detours for months at a time. The dust and noise are part of daily life in a growth corridor.
Limited nightlife and dining. You’ve got the pub, the RSL, and a handful of chains. If you want cocktail bars and degustation menus, you’re driving into the city. The food scene is improving year on year, but it is still a long way from what the inner suburbs offer.
Internet can be patchy. New estates sometimes have NBN issues during the rollout phase. Check your address on the NBN checker before signing a lease. Some streets have fibre, the next street over has fixed wireless. Do not assume.
The Dealbreakers
If you hate driving, don’t move here. Public transport in outer suburbs is functional but infrequent. Missing one train means a 30-minute wait. Bus routes are designed around school hours, not your schedule.
If your social life is in the inner suburbs, you’ll feel isolated. The distance adds friction to every plan. Friday drinks become Friday logistics. You will decline invitations because the drive home is too far, and eventually people stop inviting you.
If you work in the CBD and refuse to WFH, the commute will grind you down. Two hours a day in transit gets old fast. After six months, it stops being “worth it for the house” and starts being the thing you complain about at every barbecue.
Who Thrives in Melton
Melton works best for first-home buyers, growing families, and anyone priced out of the inner suburbs. If that’s you, this suburb will probably feel right.
People who thrive here tend to:
- Value space, affordability, and a quieter pace over inner-city convenience
- Have flexible work arrangements
- Appreciate the growth trajectory and new infrastructure
Who Should Stay Away
Honest talk: if you need walkable nightlife and spontaneous city plans, Melton will frustrate you. If your commute tolerance is under 30 minutes and you work in the CBD, look elsewhere.
The Numbers
At $285/week rent and $618,864 for a house, Melton is one of Melbourne’s more affordable options.
| Metric | Melton |
|---|---|
| Median Weekly Rent (1BR) | $285/wk |
| Median House Price | $618,864 |
| Distance to CBD | 35km |
| Population | 12,500 |
Compare that to the Melbourne-wide median house price of around $950,000 and median rent of $400/week. Melton comes in below the median on price and below on rent.
What the Future Looks Like
Melton in five years? More houses, more infrastructure, more people. The school your kid starts at will be twice the size by the time they finish. The shopping centre will get an upgrade. The train might get more frequent. Growth suburbs are messy now, but they tend to get better with time.
Population growth across Melbourne means demand in Melton is not going anywhere. If you are buying, the long-term outlook is reasonable. If you are renting, expect annual increases of 3-5%.
Final Take
Melton is not perfect. No suburb is. But if you go in with realistic expectations — knowing the commute and the construction are part of the deal — you might find it is exactly what you need.
I reckon Melton is one of Melbourne’s best-value suburbs right now. Just do not expect it to be something it is not. Visit on a Tuesday night, not a sunny Saturday open house. See it at its most ordinary. If you still like it, you have found your suburb.
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