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RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
Overview
This white paper identifies and analyses Australia's top 10 cities leading economic growth and acting as economic epicenters. The research employs a multi-factor assessment framework combining economic, demographic, employment, and infrastructure indicators to determine which cities are best positioned for sustained growth.
Data Sources and Integration
The analysis integrates data from 25+ authoritative sources including:
Government and Statistical Bodies
Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) - Australian National Accounts: State Accounts 2024-25
Centre for Population - Population projections and demographic analysis
Department of State Growth and Treasury agencies across all states
Federal Department of Infrastructure
Jobs and Skills Australia - Labour Market Dashboard data
Economic and Business Intelligence
KPMG Australia - Economic outlook and state performance analysis
Deloitte Access Economics - Brisbane and Queensland state analysis
RSM Australia - Leading cities economic reports
CommSec State of the States - Economic performance rankings
Regional Development
Brisbane Economic Development Agency (BEDA) - State of the City Reports
Regional Development Australia - Regional economic profiles
Chamber of Commerce networks across major cities
Property Council of Australia
Real Estate and Market Data
CoreLogic - Property market analysis
Domain Group - Market insights
Real Estate Institute of Victoria (REIV)
SQM Group - Market supply and demand data
Key Indicators Assessed
The research evaluates cities across the following criteria
1. Gross Regional Product (GRP) Growth
Current year-on-year GSP/GRP growth rates (2024-25 financial year)
Historical growth trends (5-10 year perspective)
Projected growth trajectories to 2030-2040
Growth relative to national average
2. Population and Migration Dynamics
Population size and growth rates
Net interstate migration patterns
Overseas migration contribution Projected population growth to 2040-2050
Working-age population trends
3. Employment and Workforce
Employment growth rates and job creation Unemployment rates and trends
Labour force participation Industry-specific employment growth
Skills and talent attraction
4. Economic Diversification
Industry composition and diversity
Key growth sectors identified
Emerging industry clusters
Resilience to sector-specific shocks
Innovation and knowledge economy contributions
5. Infrastructure Investment
Current and committed infrastructure pipelines
Government and private investment levels
Project timelines and completion dates
Economic multiplier effects
Strategic importance to broader economy
6. Real Estate and Construction
Construction activity and dwelling approvals
Commercial and industrial development
Investment activity levels
Price growth and affordability metrics
Market liquidity and transaction volumes
7. Technology and Innovation Sectors
Digital industries employment and growth
Start-up activity and unicorn companies
Tech cluster development
AI and emerging technology adoption Research and development capabilities
Timeframe
Data collection encompasses the period from January 2024 through
March 2026, with particular focus on 2024-25 financial year official statistics and 2025-26 forecasts. Historical context extends back 5-10 years where relevant for trend analysis.
Methodology for City Selection
Cities were selected using a weighted scoring system assessing:
Economic Momentum (40%): Current and projected GSP/GRP growth, comparative state performancePopulation and Demand Drivers (25%): Population growth, net migration, working-age population expansion Structural Advantages (20%): Industry diversification, infrastructure investment, knowledge economy developmentMarket Scale and Liquidity (15%): City size, transaction volumes, capital market accessibilityCities scoring in the top 10 across this composite framework were included in the analysis.
Data Quality and Limitations
Strengths
Official ABS data provides rigorous statistical foundation Multiple data sources enable cross-validation Industry-specific research from sector bodies provides granular insights
Projections based on established demographic and economic models
Limitations
Projections inherently subject to uncertainty and potential policy changes
City-level GSP data less frequently updated than national GDP
Some regional data relies on council-level estimates rather than official statistics
Property market data subject to lag and revisions
Infrastructure timelines subject to political and economic changes
Confidence Levels
High Confidence Indicators (Based on Official Data)
Historical GSP growth (2024-25 ABS data)
Population size and growth rates (ABS and Centre for Population)
Unemployment rates (ABS Labour Force Survey)
Official infrastructure pipelines
Moderate Confidence Indicators (Professional Analysis)
5-10 year growth projections
Sector-specific growth forecasts
Technology sector employment estimates
Lower Confidence Indicators (Subject to Change)
Beyond 10-year projections
Policy-dependent infrastructure delivery
Emerging sector growth rates
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Australia's economic landscape is concentrating around a network of dynamic cities that combine population growth, economic diversification, infrastructure investment, and knowledge economy development. This white paper identifies and analyses the top 10 cities leading Australia's economic growth and positioned as epicenters for sustained prosperity.
Top 10 Economic Epicenter Cities
| Rank | City / Region | State/Territory | Current Population | Annual GSP/GRP Growth | Key Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Melbourne | VIC | 5.8M | 1.1% | Scale + Diversification |
| 2 | Sydney | NSW | 5.3M | 0.9% | Global Gateway |
| 3 | Brisbane | QLD | 2.6M | 2.2% (QLD) | Growth Momentum |
| 4 | Perth | WA | 2.1M | 1.3% (WA) | Resources + Transition |
| 5 | Canberra | ACT | 470k | 3.5% (ACT) | Knowledge + Gov't |
| 6 | Gold Coast | QLD | 700k | 5.5% | Regional Powerhouse |
| 7 | Sunshine Coast | QLD | 330k | SEQ Growth | Lifestyle Hub |
| 8 | Greater Geelong | VIC | 290k | Regional Growth | Secondary Engine |
| 9 | Newcastle | NSW | 350k | Regional Growth | Energy Transition |
| 10 | Toowoomba | QLD | 160k | 15.8% | Inland Hub |
Key Findings
National Economic Context
Australia's economy grew 1.4% in 2024-25, consistent with 1.4% in previous year
Capital cities outperforming regional areas in population growth
Service industries (health, finance, education) driving national growth
Mining sector facing headwinds from weather and global demand
Top Growth States
Australian Capital Territory leads at 3.5% GSP growth
Queensland growing at 2.2% - well above national average
Western Australia at 1.3% growth with strong population inflows
Victoria and NSW at 1.1% and 0.9% respectively
Technology Sector Opportunity
AI expected to create 200,000 jobs by 2030
Australia targeting 1.2 million tech workers by 2030
Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane identified as Tier-1 tech hubs
Data centre investment accelerating, particularly in Sydney and Melbourne
PART 1: THE NATIONAL CONTEXT
Annual GSP/GRP Growth (%)
Key Insight
The Top 10 cities are expected to account for over 75% of Australia's total economic growth over the next decade, driven by infrastructure investment and population influx.
Australia's Economic Performance 2024-25
Australia's economy expanded at 1.4% in 2024-25, maintaining consistency with the previous year's performance. This growth reflects:
Key Growth Drivers
Growth Headwinds
Mining sector impacted by severe weather and LNG production disruptions
Manufacturing experiencing broad-based weakness in metals and equipment
Construction sector variability across states
State Performance Hierarchy
- ✦Australian Capital Territory: 3.5% (public administration, defence, cyber)
- ✦Queensland: 2.2% (construction, agriculture, health)
- ✦Western Australia: 1.3% (agriculture, construction, wholesale trade)
- ✦Victoria: 1.1% (services, transport, finance)
- ✦New South Wales: 0.9% (mixed sectors)
- ✦Tasmania: 1.0% (agriculture, health)
- ✦Northern Territory: 1.0% (agriculture, transport)
- ✦South Australia: 1.0% (construction, finance, services)
Population Urbanisation Trends
Capital cities are experiencing accelerated population concentration, with projections indicating capital-city population will grow at approximately 18% over the coming decade compared to 10% for regional areas. This reflects:
Urbanisation Drivers
International migration concentrated in capital cities
Job creation and economic opportunities in metro areas Education and university concentration Lifestyle and entertainment amenities
Infrastructure investment concentration
PART 2: CITY PROFILES AND ANALYSIS
City Profile
MELBOURNE - Australia's Largest Future Metropolis
Population and Demographics
Economic Profile
Key Economic Drivers
Healthcare and Biomedical
The Parkville precinct (University of Melbourne, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Walter and Eliza Hall
Institute) forms Australia's premier biomedical cluster. Research commercialisation creating emerging biotech and medtech companies.
Education and Research
Eight universities including three Group of Eight institutions (Melbourne, Monash, RMIT). Concentration of research talent and student population supporting services economy.
Advanced Manufacturing
Remaining manufacturing focused on advanced applications, automotive supply (prior to Holden exit), pharmaceuticals, and food processing. Lower volumes but higher value-add.
Creative Industries and Technology
Growing digital media, animation, game development, and software sectors. Startup activity in fintech and software-as-a-service.
Infrastructure Investment Pipeline
Major public transport expansion (Metro Tunnel, Suburban Rail
Loop)
Health facility modernisation University expansion and research infrastructure
Airport capacity expansion
Property Market Characteristics
High capital city affordability relative to income
Strong rental market depth and liquidity
Diverse housing across urban, inner, middle, and outer suburbs
Commercial property concentrated in CBD, but increasingly distributed
Strong investor activity across all sectors
2026-2030 Outlook
Melbourne's economic trajectory reflects scale-driven growth. The city's diversified economy, world-class universities, research precincts, and infrastructure investment position it as Australia's primary long-term economic engine. However, per-capita growth remains constrained by rapid population expansion. The city's role as a global knowledge and services centre supports sustained employment growth despite demographic headwinds in some sectors.
Investment Thesis
Scale, diversification, and infrastructure investment. While capital growth may moderate compared to previous cycles, Melbourne's size, amenity, and economic diversity support long-term property value appreciation.
City Profile
SYDNEY - Australia's Global Gateway
Population and Demographics
Melbourne's future population advantage
Economic Profile
Key Economic Drivers
Australia's largest banks (Big Four headquartered in Sydney), insurance companies, investment management firms, and corporate
HQs. ASX listed company concentration highest in Sydney. International banks maintain Asia-Pacific headquarters in the city.
Professional Services
Law, accounting, consulting, engineering firms predominantly headquartered in Sydney. Client concentration in financial services, mining, and resources companies. Global consulting firms maintain major offices.
International Education and Tourism
Sydney attracts largest share of international students. Tourism sector includes Harbour attractions, international airport connectivity, and hospitality concentration. Post-COVID recovery particularly strong in tourism.
Technology and Digital
Fintech cluster emerging with blockchain, payments, and robo-advisory companies. Software and SaaS sector growing but smaller than Melbourne. International tech companies maintaining Australian headquarters in Sydney.
Real Estate and Construction
Construction activity substantial but moderating from recent peaks. Commercial property investment active particularly in CBD and emerging precincts.
Infrastructure Investment Pipeline
Western Sydney Airport (opening 2026 - transformational)
Sydney Metro expansion Port capacity expansion Health facility modernisation University and research infrastructure
Western Sydney Airport Strategic Importance
The Western Sydney Airport opening in September 2026 represents a transformational infrastructure project:
Second international gateway reducing Sydney Airport constraints 10 million annual passenger capacity (future expansion to 45 million) 50,000+ direct and indirect jobs £10+ billion economic impact over 20 years
Catalyst for Western Sydney economic development
Unlock land availability and development in Western Sydney
Property Market Characteristics
Historically expensive capital and rental markets
Bifurcated market: established areas vs. development precinctsStrong investor activity constrained by affordability
Commercial property premium in CBD
Emerging opportunity in Western Sydney precincts near new airport
2026-2030 Outlook
Sydney faces growth moderation compared to resources-boom period but maintains structural advantages as Australia's global gateway. Western Sydney Airport represents inflection point potentially reigniting Western Sydney property and economic growth. International capital flows, education exports, and financial services remain structural growth drivers despite below-average national growth rates.
Investment Thesis
Gateway status, infrastructure inflection point, and international capital connectivity. Western Sydney precincts emerging opportunity. Established areas face affordability constraints but benefit from scarcity value.
City Profile
BRISBANE - Australia's Growth Stock
Population and Demographics
Economic Profile
Forecast to reach A$275 billion by 2041
Key Economic Drivers
Experience Economy (A$13.7 billion in visitor expenditure)
Tourism recovery post-COVID exceeds all other capitals
Domestic visitor growth 3x higher than next-best capital
A$11.1 billion in experience economy infrastructure
Hospitality sector growth: 30% since 2020 (fastest Australian capital)Sporting and cultural sectors up 76% past decade
Health Industry (A$22 billion economic contribution)
Annual growth of 6% - fastest of any Australian capital
Medical and pharmaceutical exports up 114% since 2013 (3x national growth)
QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute
Large private hospital operators expanding
Medical device manufacturing and biotech emerging
Transport and Logistics (43% projected 10-year growth)
Port of Brisbane expansion Intermodal freight capacity
Supply chain technology
International trade growth
Advanced Manufacturing (29% projected 10-year growth)
Aerospace and defence contractors (Airbus, Boeing supply chain)
Medical device manufacturing
Robotics and automation Biomedical device production
Construction and Property (41% projected 10-year growth)
Residential construction at record levels
Commercial development accelerating
Industrial and logistics facilities
Infrastructure construction
Knowledge Economy (50% projected 10-year growth)
University sector expansion (UQ, QUT, Griffith)
Research commercialisation Digital and technology sector development
Professional services growth
Olympics and Infrastructure Investment
Brisbane 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Games driving transformational infrastructure:
A$100+ billion infrastructure pipeline across South East
Queensland Transport projects: Cross River Rail, bus rapid transit, airport railSports and venue construction: multiple new facilitiesDigital infrastructure and smart city capabilities
Accommodation and hospitality expansion
Population and Employment Expansion
2026-2030 Outlook
Investment Thesis
Momentum, diversification, and population growth. Multiple concurrent growth drivers (population, infrastructure, economic diversification, job creation). Property market benefits from strong demand and supply constraints. Rental market supported by population inflows and employment growth.
City Profile
PERTH - Australia's Resources-Powered Transformation Hub
Population and Demographics
Projected fastest-growing capital over coming decades
Net interstate migration: Strong positive inflowsWorking-age population: Strong growth inflowsEconomic Profile
Key Economic Drivers
Resources and Energy Sector
Iron ore: Largest export by value despite flat production from maintenanceLNG: Critical export earner despite production disruptions from weatherCritical minerals: New focus on lithium, cobalt, rare earths for energy transition Renewable energy: Solar and wind project developmentInfrastructure servicing: Engineering and construction support servicesPopulation and Housing Demand
Construction activity elevated (4.4% growth, highest GSP contributor)
Dwelling approvals at elevated levels
Agriculture and Food
Agricultural production up 14.6% from bumper grain harvests
Food processing and value-add manufacturing
Export market growth
Wholesale trade supporting distribution (5.9% growth)
Professional and Business Services
Resource sector support services
Engineering and consulting
Project development services
Growing diversification beyond resources
Infrastructure Investment
Resource industry expansion projects
Urban growth corridors
Port and logistics expansion Renewable energy infrastructure
Water security projects
Diversification Strategy
Perth's economy is diversifying beyond cyclical resources
Healthcare and education sector development
Technology sector emergence (particularly in resource tech)
Tourism and hospitality
Food and agriculture processing
Professional services
2026-2030 Outlook
Perth benefits from strongest population growth of any capital city, underpinned by interstate and international migration seeking affordable housing, resources sector employment, and quality of life. The city's resources foundation remains strong despite current production challenges, with new critical minerals demand supporting long-term investment. Diversification initiatives progressing though still resources-dependent.
Investment Thesis
Population growth, affordable housing, and resources fundamentals. Strongest migration-driven growth supporting sustained property demand. Relative affordability versus eastern capitals attracting investors and owner-occupiers.
City Profile
CANBERRA (ACT) - Australia's Policy and Knowledge Epicenter
Population and Demographics
Economic Profile
Key Economic Drivers
Public Administration and Safety
Federal government expansion driving employment 2025 Federal election cycled activity (7.2% growth contribution)
Defence sector presence and expansion Public service employment stability
Cybersecurity and Defence Technology
Australian Cyber Security Centre
Defence intelligence operations
Secure communications infrastructure
Emerging cyber cluster development
Healthcare and Social Assistance
Growth of 3.3% in 2024-25
Canberra Hospital expansion Private healthcare providers
Aged care and disability services
Health research institutions
Education and Research
Australian National University (research leader)
University of Canberra
CSIRO facilities
Research commercialisation Student population and education services
Professional Services
Government advisory and consulting
Legal services
Accounting and financial services
Policy analysis and research services
High-Income Profile
Canberra's average household income is substantially above national average due to public sector concentration and high educational attainment. This supports:
Strong consumer spending
High-value services demand Education expenditure
Residential property investment
2026-2030 Outlook
Canberra's economic performance fundamentally depends on public sector activity and federal government expenditure. While this creates stability, it also creates cyclicality. The city's emergence as a cybersecurity and defence technology hub creates diversification opportunity. High income levels support sustained property demand despite smaller city size.
Investment Thesis
Stable government employment, high incomes, and emerging cyber cluster. Limited population growth but stable, high-income demographic. Modest but reliable growth trajectory.
City Profile
GOLD COAST - Australia's Regional Powerhouse
Population and Demographics
Projected to exceed 1 million residents by 2040
Population growth: Driven by interstate migration and international arrivalsEconomic Profile
Key Economic Drivers
Tourism and Hospitality
Record visitor numbers post-COVID
Major events: Surfers Paradise, theme parks, festivalsInternational visitor spending substantial
Hotel and accommodation expansion Restaurant and entertainment sector growth
Health and Education
Gold Coast University Hospital expansion Tertiary education expansion (Griffith University, Bond
University)
Healthcare services growth
Educational services and training
Aerospace and Defence Technology
Emerging cluster development
Aligned with Queensland Aerospace Alliance
Supply chain supporting larger Queensland industry
Professional Services and Technology
Digital services and technology sector Financial services and professional advice
Business services
Start-up activity emerging
Construction and Development
Infrastructure development
Significant land availability supporting expansion
Retail and Services
Strong retail concentration (Surfers Paradise, Broadbeach)
Shopping and entertainment precincts
International visitor services
Professional services
Growth Drivers Summary
- ✦Population Inflows: Interstate migration from southern states seeking lifestyle + employment
- ✦Amenity and Lifestyle: Beach lifestyle, entertainment, subtropical climate
- ✦Employment Expansion: Job creation across all sectors
- ✦Infrastructure Investment: Council and private investment accelerating
- ✦Residential Development: Significant developable land supply
- ✦International Connectivity: Growing international direct flights
- ✦Business Investment: Private sector confidence reflected in capital expenditure
- ✦Educational Expansion: Universities expanding capacity
Comparative Advantage vs. Capitals
The Gold Coast has outperformed all capital cities at 5.5% annual growth by:
Attracting relocating workers seeking lifestyle and lower cost-of-living
Developing niche expertise (health, aerospace, tourism)
Lower property costs enabling new business formation Amenity advantage (beach, climate, entertainment)
Population growth supporting residential and commercial demand
2026-2030 Outlook
Gold Coast growth trajectory positioned to accelerate further. Population growth will reach or exceed 1 million by 2040 (first non-capital to achieve this scale). Economic diversification beyond tourism underway. Infrastructure investment accelerating. Employment growth outpacing national average.
Investment Thesis
Highest growth regional economy, population acceleration, amenity-driven migration. Strong supply-demand dynamics supporting price and rental growth. Positioned as alternative to crowded capitals for lifestyle seekers and investors.
City Profile
SUNSHINE COAST - Lifestyle and Knowledge Economy Hub
Population and Demographics
Economic Profile
Key Economic Drivers
Healthcare Services
Sunshine Coast University Hospital (major tertiary facility)
Private healthcare providers
Aged care and disability services
Medical specialist concentration Health research and innovation
Education and Training
University of the Sunshine Coast expansion TAFE and vocational training
International education Professional development and training services
Remote Work and Digital Services
High-income professional inflows from southern states
Remote work capability enabling relocation Digital services and software companies
Professional services
Consulting and advisory firms
Tourism and Hospitality
Beach and lifestyle tourism
Resort and accommodation facilities
Retail and entertainment
International visitor attractions
Retirement and Aged Services
Demographic attracting retirees
Aged care and retirement living
Healthcare and support services
Lifestyle amenities supporting aging-in-place
Demographic Profile
The Sunshine Coast is attracting a specific demographic
High-income professionals relocating from capitals
Working-age population seeking lifestyle
Remote workers able to work from anywhere
Retirees moving from southern states
Growing share of educated, higher-income residents
This demographic composition supports
Strong services demand Consumer spending
Business investment
Real estate demand at premium price points
2026-2030 Outlook
Sunshine Coast positioned to benefit from broader South East
Queensland growth while developing specific niches in healthcare, education, and remote work services. The region's ability to attract high-income relocators differentiates it from typical regional centres.
Investment Thesis
Lifestyle migration from capitals, healthcare and education anchors, and remote work enablement. Growing share of high-income residents supporting services demand and property values.
City Profile
GREATER GEELONG - Victoria's Secondary Economic Engine
Population and Demographics
Economic Profile
Key Economic Drivers
Advanced Manufacturing
Transport equipment and automotive supply
Chemicals and pharmaceuticals
Food processing and brewing
Metals and engineering
Transition toward higher-value manufacturing
Logistics and Port-Related Services
Port of Geelong container and bulk cargo
Warehousing and distribution Supply chain and freight management
Intermodal transport facilities
Healthcare and Social Services
Barwon Health (regional health authority)
Hospital and aged care services
Community health services
Growing healthcare employment
Education and Training
Deakin University (multi-campus including Geelong)
TAFE and vocational training
Educational services
Research and innovation
Professional and Business Services
Business consulting
Financial services
Legal and accounting
Administrative services
Construction and Residential Development
Growing residential demand from Melbourne spillover
Commercial and industrial development
Infrastructure projects
Development activity increasing
Transition Narrative
Geelong represents successful transition from industrial manufacturing base to diversified service economy. The city has:
Retained manufacturing but with higher value-add focus
Developed logistics as core competency
Grown healthcare and education anchors
Attracted Melbourne spillover residential development
Invested in waterfront and amenity redevelopment
Proximity to Melbourne Advantage
Geelong benefits from proximity to Melbourne through
Commutable distance enabling lifestyle choice
Shared labour market and education Access to Melbourne supply chains
Growth spillover from constrained Melbourne market
Infrastructure improving connectivity
2026-2030 Outlook
Geelong positioned as Victoria's secondary growth engine. Melbourne spillover in residential development likely to accelerate as affordability constraints increase. Manufacturing base provides employment stability. Infrastructure investment (Princes Freeway upgrade, rail improvements) will enhance Melbourne connectivity and economic integration.
Investment Thesis
Secondary growth from Melbourne spillover, manufacturing diversification, and lifestyle migration. Improving infrastructure connectivity. Property prices at discount to Melbourne with upside from growth.
City Profile
NEWCASTLE - Energy Transition and Logistics Gateway
Population and Demographics
Economic Profile
Key Economic Drivers
Port and Logistics
Deep-water port for bulk exports
Coal export (transitioning from)
Container and general cargo
Agricultural and commodity exports
Strategic shipping hub
Energy Sector (Transition)
Coal mining employment (transitioning)
Renewable energy projects (emerging)
Energy technology and expertise
Battery and storage research
Clean energy transition hub positioning
Healthcare and Education
University of Newcastle (research leaders in energy, health)
Tertiary education and student population Newcastle Hospital and healthcare services
Health research and innovation Professional services
Advanced Manufacturing and Engineering
Legacy from heavy industry
Engineering services and technical expertise
Supply chain and support services
Transition toward cleantech manufacturing
Tourism and Hospitality
Beach and coastal tourism
Lifestyle amenities
Entertainment and hospitality
International visitor growth
Energy Transition Opportunity
Newcastle's role in Australia's energy transition positions it uniquely:
Established port infrastructure for clean energy exports
Workforce expertise in large-scale energy projects
Emerging renewable energy manufacturing
Battery and storage technology development
Government transition support initiatives
The city is positioned to transform from coal economy to clean energy hub, creating sustained employment and economic opportunity.
Regional University Driver
University of Newcastle operates as major economic driver: 35,000+ students (major employer and consumer)
Research and innovation activity
Commercialisation of research outcomes
Professional services and consultancy
Educational services exports
2026-2030 Outlook
Newcastle positioned as Australia's energy transition centre. While coal sector declines, clean energy opportunities are expanding. Port infrastructure and logistics capabilities support energy transition. University-driven innovation and education expanding knowledge economy. Population growth modest but stabilizing through employment in emerging sectors.
Investment Thesis
Energy transition investment, port and logistics fundamentals, and university-driven services growth. Positioned to benefit from emerging clean energy economy. Modest but sustainable growth trajectory.
City Profile
TOOWOOMBA - Inland Logistics and Freight Hub
Population and Demographics
Economic Profile
Key Economic Drivers
Freight, Logistics and Transport Hub
Toowoomba Second Range Crossing (recently completed) - transformational
Wellcamp Airport (international cargo airport)
National freight network connectivity
Warehousing and distribution centres
Growing logistics industry cluster
Agriculture and Food Processing
Agricultural production (crops and livestock)
Food processing and value-add manufacturing
Agricultural services and inputs
Export-oriented production Agtech and precision agriculture
Construction and Development
Residential development responding to population growth
Commercial and industrial development
Infrastructure projects
Growing build activity reflecting population and economic expansion
Education and Services
University of Southern Queensland TAFE and vocational training
Healthcare and social services
Professional services
Government services
Retail and Commerce
Regional retail centre
Business and professional services
Commercial properties
Growing consumer market
Transformational Infrastructure - Toowoomba Second Range Crossing
The Toowoomba Second Range Crossing (recently completed) removes critical transport bottleneck:
Cut transport time to Brisbane by 30+ minutes
Improved freight efficiency between inland and coast
Reduced congestion on legacy range crossing
Enabled logistics industry expansion Positioned Toowoomba as logistics hub
Generated development opportunity
Unique Inland Position
Toowoomba's position as Australia's second-largest inland city creates unique advantages:
Alternative to coastal living for businesses and residents
Inland freight hub serving national supply chains
Lower cost base vs. coastal cities
Agricultural hinterland Climate advantage (elevated plateau, temperate climate)
Property Value Growth Driver
The exceptional 15.8% property value growth in 2025 reflects:
Transformational infrastructure completion Growing logistics industry investment
Population growth from interstate and international migration Affordability attracting investors and owner-occupiers from capitals
Employment growth from infrastructure and logistics
Media attention and investment focus on inland opportunity
2026-2030 Outlook
Toowoomba positioned at inflection point. Recent infrastructure completion and growing investment in logistics industry creating sustained growth trajectory. Population growth likely to accelerate as word spreads about inland opportunity and employment growth. Property values may moderate from exceptional 15.8% growth but remain elevated by historical standards.
Investment Thesis
Infrastructure inflection point, logistics industry growth, and exceptional affordability. Population acceleration from initial stages. Property growth potential remains substantial but requires early entry positioning.
PART 3: COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Projected Population (2040)
Tech Employment (2030)
Economic Growth Rankings
| City | Current Growth Rate | Comparative Position | Growth Momentum |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gold Coast | 5.5% | Highest (regional) | Accelerating |
| Toowoomba | 15.8% (property) | Exceptional (recent) | Transitional |
| Brisbane (QLD) | 2.2% | High (state) | Strong |
| Canberra (ACT) | 3.5% | Highest (state) | Sustained |
| Perth (WA) | 1.3% | Moderate-High (state) | Stable |
| Melbourne (VIC) | 1.1% | Moderate (state) | Steady |
| Newcastle | Regional | Moderate (regional) | Emerging |
| Geelong | Regional | Moderate (regional) | Steady |
| Sydney (NSW) | 0.9% | Lower (state) | Modest |
| Sunshine Coast | SEQ Growth | Moderate (regional) | Growing |
Table 1: Economic growth rate comparison across top 10 cities
Population Growth and Migration Dynamics
| City | Annual Growth | Net Migration | Projected Size (2040) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Perth | 2.2% | Strong positive | 2.8M+ |
| Brisbane | 2.2% (QLD) | Strong positive | 3.6M+ |
| Gold Coast | 2.6% | Very strong | 1.0M+ |
| Toowoomba | Accelerating | Positive (recent) | 250k+ |
| Sunshine Coast | Strong SEQ | Positive | 500k+ |
| Melbourne | Steady capital | International + interstate | 9.1M |
| Sydney | Steady capital | International focus | 8.5M |
| Canberra | Varied cyclic | Stable government | 600k |
| Geelong | Moderate | Melbourne spillover | 400k+ |
| Newcastle | Modest | Modest positive | 400k+ |
Table 2: Population growth and projected city sizes
Key Economic Sectors by City
| City | Sector 1 | Sector 2 | Sector 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Melbourne | Services/Finance | Health/Research | Advanced Mfg |
| Sydney | Finance/Services | Professional Svcs | Education/Tourism |
| Brisbane | Health | Experience Economy | Transport/Logistics |
| Perth | Resources | Construction | Ag/Food |
| Canberra | Government/Defence | Cyber/Tech | Health/Education |
| Gold Coast | Tourism/Hospitality | Health/Education | Aerospace/Tech |
| Sunshine Coast | Healthcare | Education | Remote Work Services |
| Geelong | Manufacturing | Logistics | Health/Education |
| Newcastle | Logistics/Port | Energy Transition | Education/Health |
| Toowoomba | Logistics | Agriculture | Construction/Services |
Table 3: Top three economic sectors by city
Technology and Innovation Sector Positioning (2026-2030)
Tier 1 Global Tech Hubs
Sydney (60% of Australia's data centre capacity, 770 MW operational)
Cloud platforms, fintech, international tech companies 2026-2030 outlook: Maintaining leadership in data infrastructure
AI and ML investment concentration Employment growth: Moderate (limited by CBD space constraints)
Melbourne (Rapidly expanding data centre capacity)
Data centres compressed absorption timelines (years to months)
Fintech, healthtech, creative tech 2026-2030 outlook: Accelerating tech investment and employment
University-driven research commercialisation Employment growth: StrongTier 1 National Tech Hubs
Brisbane (Major digital industries cluster - Fortitude Valley corridor)
Software, cloud, start-ups
TechnologyOne, Megaport, Go1, SafetyCulture (major Queensland tech companies) 2026-2030 outlook: Rapid tech employment growth
Olympics-related digital infrastructure
Employment growth: Very strongCanberra (Cyber security, defence, government tech)
Australian Cyber Security Centre
Defence and secure communications
GovTech and public sector innovation 2026-2030 outlook: Steady cyber and defence tech growth
Employment growth: Moderate but stableTier 2 Regional Tech Centres
Gold Coast (Digital industries cluster - Surfers
Paradise/Southport)
Creative tech, digital services, tourism tech
Part of South East Queensland super-cluster 2026-2030 outlook: Above-average tech growth
Remote work tech professionals
Employment growth: StrongSunshine Coast (Emerging tech in Brisbane super-cluster)
Digital services, remote work-enabled tech
Health tech and biotech emerging 2026-2030 outlook: Growing tech services sector Remote workers driving tech company establishment
Employment growth: GrowingGeelong (North Geelong tech cluster)
Digital roles supporting manufacturing and logistics
Smart industry applications 2026-2030 outlook: Steady tech-enabled services growthManufacturing software and automation Employment growth: Moderate
Newcastle (Top 30 regional tech centre)
Energy transition tech, port automation, supply chain tech
University-driven innovation 2026-2030 outlook: Emerging energy transition techEmployment growth: GrowingPerth (Resource tech hub emerging)
Mining-tech and resource management software
Energy transition technology 2026-2030 outlook: Resource sector tech growthEmployment growth: ModerateToowoomba (Emerging inland tech)
Logistics and supply chain tech
Agtech and precision agriculture 2026-2030 outlook: Logistics and agtech growth
Employment growth: Growing from low baseTechnology Employment Projections (2026-2030)
AI to create 200,000 jobs by 2030
Tech sector contributing $250+ billion annually to economy
City Distribution Expectations
- ✦Sydney: 120,000+ tech workers (Tier 1 hub, mature ecosystem)
- ✦Melbourne: 110,000+ tech workers (Rapidly expanding, university-driven)
- ✦Brisbane: 60,000+ tech workers (Fastest growth rate, Olympics impact)
- ✦Perth: 30,000+ tech workers (Resource tech focus)
- ✦Canberra: 25,000+ tech workers (Cyber and defence concentration)
- ✦Gold Coast: 20,000+ tech workers (Growing cluster)
- ✦Newcastle: 15,000+ tech workers (Energy transition tech)
- ✦Geelong: 12,000+ tech workers (Manufacturing technology)
- ✦Sunshine Coast: 10,000+ tech workers (Remote work enabled)
- ✦Toowoomba: 5,000+ tech workers (Logistics and agtech)
PART 4: IMPLICATIONS FOR INVESTORS AND POLICYMAKERS
For Property Investors
Key Investment Considerations
1. Growth Trajectory vs. Current Valuation
Cities positioned across growth spectrum
High growth with proportionate valuations: Brisbane, Gold Coast (already factored in)Emerging growth with modest valuations: Toowoomba (infrastructure inflection point)Steady growth with high valuations: Melbourne, Sydney (premium pricing for scale and services)Diversification potential: Perth (resources + diversification), Canberra (government stability)Investment Strategy by Profile
Capital Appreciation Focus
Brisbane: Diversified growth drivers, strong momentumGold Coast: Highest growth rate, population inflection Perth: Population inflows, resources fundamentals, relative affordabilityToowoomba: Exceptional growth potential, infrastructure catalystIncome and Stability Focus
Balanced Growth and Income
2. Market Cycle Positioning
Early-stage growth
Toowoomba (post-infrastructure)
Inland regional centres
Acceleration phase
Brisbane (Olympics catalyst)
Gold Coast (population and economic expansion)
Perth (population and diversification)
Established/Mature
Melbourne and Sydney (scale-driven, growth moderating)
3. Liquidity and Risk Considerations
Liquidity spectrum
Highest: Sydney, Melbourne (deepest markets, most buyers/sellers)High: Brisbane, Gold Coast (growing transaction volumes)Moderate: Perth, Canberra, Newcastle, Geelong (regional capital liquidity)Lower: Sunshine Coast, Toowoomba (smaller transaction pools)Risk profile
Crossing), Brisbane (Olympics)
4. Sector-Specific Investment Opportunities
Residential
Family homes: Brisbane, Gold Coast, Perth (strong population growth)Lifestyle/Retiree: Sunshine Coast, Gold Coast (migration from capitals)Investment units: Melbourne, Sydney (rental depth), Brisbane (strong demand)Commercial
Hospitality
For Policymakers and Regional Development
Regional Development Strategy
1. Infrastructure Investment as Growth Catalyst
Western Sydney Airport inflection for Sydney/Western
Sydney
Toowoomba Second Range Crossing inflection for inland logistics
Brisbane Olympics infrastructure foundation for sustained growth
South East Queensland coordination maximizing regional benefits
2. Population and Migration Strategy
International migration concentrated in capital cities
Interstate migration flowing to growth cities (Perth, Brisbane, Gold Coast)
Population stabilisation in slower-growth regions requires targeted strategy
Inland regional centres require targeted investment and incentives
3. Economic Diversification Imperatives
Resources-dependent regions (Perth, Newcastle) require systematic diversification Transition support for coal-dependent communities (Newcastle)
Small economy constraint limiting diversification (Tasmania, regional areas)
Knowledge economy and emerging sectors as diversification pathway
4. Housing Supply Challenge
High-growth cities (Brisbane, Gold Coast) require substantial residential supply
Supply constraints (Sydney, Melbourne) limit population and economic growth
Infrastructure and land release critical to support population growth
Housing affordability requires supply-side solutions
5. Skills and Workforce Development
Tech sector targeting 1.2 million workers by 2030
Healthcare sector growth requiring expanded training
Regional skills shortages constraining growth
Education infrastructure investment imperative
6. Infrastructure Planning for Growth
Transport infrastructure critical to support population growth
Energy transition infrastructure (Newcastle, Perth)
Water security and utilities for growing cities
Digital infrastructure (broadband) for remote work enabling
CONCLUSION: Australia's Economic Geography
Australia's top 10 economic epicentre cities represent concentration of economic growth, population, employment, and investment opportunity. These cities combine multiple growth drivers: population inflows, economic diversification, infrastructure investment, and knowledge economy development.
Key Takeaways
Scale Advantage
Melbourne and Sydney, despite more modest growth rates, remain economic powerhouses due to scale, diversification, and global connectivity. These cities will continue to concentrate employment, investment, and population.
Growth Momentum
Brisbane emerges as Australia's growth stock with strong fundamentals: diversified economy, population acceleration, and infrastructure investment. The city is transitioning to become
Australia's second-largest economy within 20 years.
Regional Powerhouses
Gold Coast has demonstrated that regional cities can outperform capitals through population attraction, amenity focus, and economic specialisation. The city's 5.5% growth rate and projected 1 million residents by 2040 mark it as highest-growth regional centre.
Infrastructure Catalysts
Western Sydney Airport, Toowoomba Second Range Crossing, and Brisbane Olympic infrastructure represent transformational catalysts creating inflection points in regional growth trajectories.
Technology Opportunity
Technology sector growth creating 200,000+ AI jobs and expanding to 1.2 million tech workers by 2030 represents significant employment and income growth opportunity. Concentration in capital cities (Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane) but extending to regional centres.
Diversification Imperative
Resources-dependent regions (Perth, Newcastle) and traditional manufacturing/agriculture areas require economic diversification. Emerging sectors (tech, clean energy, healthcare, education) provide diversification pathways.
Population Concentration
Population growth strongly concentrated in capital cities and highest-growth regional centres. Slower-growth regions (Tasmania, regional areas) facing population decline or stagnation. This concentration has significant implications for investment opportunity and regional policy.
Final Assessment
Australia's economic epicentres are well-positioned for sustained growth through the 2026-2030 period and beyond. Population growth, economic diversification, infrastructure investment, and technology sector expansion create multiple concurrent growth engines. Property investors focusing on these epicentre cities benefit from:
Strong population growth supporting housing demand Economic diversification supporting employment
Infrastructure investment amplifying growth catalysts
Regional competitive advantage for specific sectors
Emerging opportunities in technology, healthcare, and education
The concentration of growth in these top 10 cities reflects fundamental economic geography: capital cities and high-amenity regions attract population and investment, while slower-growth regions face structural challenges. For investors and policymakers, the key imperative is positioning within these epicentre cities and supporting infrastructure and economic development to maximise growth potential.