As a growing suburb, Mount Martha is part of Melbourne’s expanding urban fringe where population growth is outpacing supply. That demand-supply equation is the foundation of the property market outlook. Here are the 2026 numbers.
At a glance: 51 km from CBD · Growth corridor ring · House $488K–$712K · Unit $315K–$405K
Median Property Prices – Mount Martha (2026)
| Property Type | Median Price Range | vs Melbourne Median |
|---|---|---|
| House | $487,500–$712,500 | ~43% below |
| Unit/Apartment | $315,000–$405,000 | ~38% below |
Estimates based on REIV quarterly data and Domain.com.au listings for 2026. Prices reflect Mount Martha’s growth corridor classification at 51 km from the CBD. Individual properties vary significantly by land size, condition, and micro-location.
Price Growth Trend – Mount Martha
Mount Martha’s property market has been strong growth fuelled by new land releases and infrastructure investment. Estimated annual capital growth sits at 5–10%, characteristic of growth corridors where land values are rising from a lower base. Growth corridor suburbs can deliver higher percentage returns than established areas, but they carry more risk and depend heavily on infrastructure delivery.
Key drivers for Mount Martha:
- New land releases and precinct structure plans
- Population growth outpacing Melbourne averages
- Government infrastructure commitments
- Relative affordability attracting first-home buyers and investors
Investor vs Owner-Occupier Breakdown
Growth corridors like Mount Martha see strong investor activity (35–50% of transactions) due to lower entry prices and land-lease packages. First-home buyers (50–65%) dominate the owner-occupier segment, often using the First Home Owner Grant ($10,000 for new builds under $750K).
| Buyer Type | Estimated Share | Typical Target |
|---|---|---|
| Owner-occupier | 50–65% | Houses, larger units |
| Investor | 35–50% | Units, smaller houses |
Infrastructure and Development Near Mount Martha
Infrastructure is the single biggest external factor in suburban property growth. Here are the key projects affecting Mount Martha:
- Melbourne Airport Rail Link connection
- Outer Metropolitan Ring Road (OMR) reservation
- Precinct Structure Plan (PSP) staged land releases
Impact: Properties within 1 km of new stations or major upgrades typically see 5–15% price premiums within 2–3 years of announcement. Track project timelines at bigbuild.vic.gov.au.
Rental Yield – Mount Martha (2026)
| Metric | Estimate |
|---|---|
| Gross rental yield (units) | 3.7–5.0% |
| Annual rent (1BR median) | $14,014 |
| Unit purchase price (median) | $315,000–$405,000 |
| House purchase price (median) | $487,500–$712,500 |
| Estimated annual growth | 5–10% |
Gross yield formula: Annual rent / Purchase price. Net yield (after expenses) is typically 1–1.5% lower after accounting for management fees, maintenance, insurance, and vacancy.
Investor note: Higher gross yields in outer suburbs often attract investors, but factor in longer vacancy periods and higher tenant turnover compared to inner Melbourne.
Related Guides
- Mount Martha Rent Guide
- Cost of Living in Mount Martha
- Mount Martha Neighbourhood Guide
- Mount Martha Transport Guide
- Is Mount Martha Safe?
Nearby suburbs:
Prices current as of April 2026. We update this guide quarterly. Got a correction? [email protected]
Sources
- Domain.com.au – property listing data – accessed April 2026
- REIV Quarterly Median Prices – reiv.com.au – accessed April 2026
- ABS Census 2021 – abs.gov.au/census

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