Woodend : Woodend Rental Yields 2026: What Investors Actually Earn
Woodend Rental Yields 2026: What Investors Actually Earn

Woodend Rental Yields 2026: What Investors Actually Earn

By Priya Sharma · April 1, 2026

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Rental Yield Summary

Property TypeMedian PriceWeekly RentGross YieldNet Yield (est)
Houses$590,363$356/wk3.1%1.3%
Units$333,011$255/wk4.0%2.5%

Gross vs Net: The Real Numbers

Gross yield is what most headlines quote. Net yield is what you actually keep after costs.

Annual costs that eat your yield:

  • Council rates: $2639/year
  • Insurance (landlord): $1,200-1,800/year
  • Property management (7-8%): $1,388/year
  • Maintenance allowance (1%): $5,903/year
  • Vacancy (2-4 weeks/year): $1,068/year

Net annual income (house): $6,651 Net yield: 1.3%

Vacancy Rate

Current vacancy: 3.2%

Tight market – tenants compete for properties. Expect minimal vacancy between tenants.

How Woodend Compares

SuburbHouse YieldUnit Yield
Woodend3.1%4.0%
Melbourne average3.2%4.1%
Box Hill2.8%3.8%

Solid middle-ring returns that balance yield with capital growth potential.

Cash Flow Analysis

At current rates (6.2% variable), interest-only on 80% LVR:

  • Annual interest: $29,282
  • Annual rent: $18,512
  • Cash flow position: Negative gearing of -${int(med_h * 0.8 * 0.062 - rent_h * 52 + med_h * 0.01 + 2000):,}/year (tax deductible)

For full investment analysis, see our Woodend investment guide.


Yield calculations based on REIV median prices and Domain/realestate.com.au rental listings for Q1 2026.

woodend rental-yield investment property 2026
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