Delora
Property Intelligence Report
314 Young Street

Fitzroy VIC 3065 · 2.4 km from Melbourne CBD

90 m² blockNeighbourhood Residential Zone (NRZ1)1 high-priority planning flag1 planning change since 20171.3 km to Victoria Park Railway Station
Analysed on 17 July 2026

The 30-second take CHECK THE FLAGS

This is a 90 m² house in Fitzroy (much smaller than a typical block here), on Neighbourhood Residential Zone land. An established, premium inner-melbourne suburb. Suburb-wide figures below are area context, not a valuation of this specific property.

On fundamentals the suburb looks 27% underpriced versus comparable areas — a genuine value signal though the flip side is a large new-housing pipeline that can hold price growth back.

Check the planning flags below carefully — this parcel carries 1 higher-priority overlay control that can affect what you build, cost to build, or the title itself.

-27%suburb vs fair value
4.3%gross rental yield (house)
1high-priority flags
282offences / 1,000 people

A plain-English synthesis of the data below — not financial advice. Every figure is explained and sourced in its section.

Where it is

The green outline is this parcel's title boundary (Vicmap Property). Use it to see the block's shape, size and frontage in context.

This parcel (title boundary)Victoria Park Railway Station

The property

The parcel itself — its actual title boundary, size and shape, and what the land alone is worth.

Land size

90 m²

much smaller than a typical block here

Approx. dimensions

9 × 12 m

frontage × depth (approx.)

Lot / plan

1 PS321197

on title

Land size, dimensions and boundary are from Vicmap Property (the state cadastre) by title parcel identifier — confirm the exact area and boundaries against the plan of subdivision in the Section 32. Dimensions are approximate (from the parcel's minimum bounding rectangle). Land value is indicative, derived from the block's area and the area's land rate — not a valuation of the whole property.

What you can build here

Development and subdivision headroom — from this block's land size, shape, zone and overlays. A key value-add question, and a key risk if you're counting on it.

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Limited — a protected low-change area

This is a Neighbourhood Residential Zone, the most restrictive residential zone — it caps multi-dwelling development and subdivision to protect existing character. Additional dwellings are possible on larger lots but are harder to win than in a General Residential Zone.

Indicative capacity: typically 1 dwelling

Indicative only — the binding limits are the council's zone schedule + ResCode and a Heritage Overlay applies — it can restrict or block demolition and new builds. Get a town planner's advice before relying on any development assumption.

Zoning & what you can build here

Lot/plan: 1\PS321197 · Parcel ID (PFI): 3095928

Neighbourhood Residential Zone NRZ1

The most restrictive residential zone — used to protect an area's existing character (garden setting, tree canopy, lower density). Subdivision and multi-dwelling development are deliberately limited compared to GRZ.

What this means for a buyer

Good for buyers who want the area to stay low-density. Poor for anyone hoping to subdivide or add a second dwelling — that's harder here by design.

The exact numeric controls (height limits, setbacks, garden-area requirements and minimum lot size) are set by Yarra City Council's specific schedule to this zone, which this report does not reproduce — confirm via VicPlan or Yarra City Council before relying on any development assumption.

What has changed here since 2017

Every gazetted zoning or overlay change recorded on this exact parcel, sourced from Vicmap Planning Scheme History.

2021New overlay — gained Heritage Overlay controls

Planning overlays on this land

Overlays add extra controls on top of the base zone — heritage, flood, bushfire, design and acquisition reservations all work this way.

Heritage Overlay HO334

Protects a place, building or precinct of recognised heritage significance. External changes, demolition and sometimes even internal works need a heritage permit.

Why it matters: Can materially restrict renovation, extension or demolition. Always check the specific heritage citation for what's actually protected (the whole building, or just the street-facing facade) before assuming a full rebuild is possible.

What it really costs to buy here

The full upfront cost — not just the price — plus the first-home-buyer savings that actually apply at this price point, and the income needed to service a loan.

Upfront cost stack

Purchase price (suburb median house)$1,342,500
Stamp duty — standard buyer$73,838
Stamp duty — eligible first-home buyer$73,838 (concession)
First Home Owner Grant (new build)
Conveyancing / legal (typical)$1,500
Building & pest inspection (typical)$600
Loan setup & settlement (typical)$800
Upfront cost on top of deposit — standard buyer$76,738
Upfront cost on top of deposit — first-home buyer$76,738

Deposit paths & indicative repayments

ScenarioDepositLoanRepaymentInsurance
20% deposit (avoids LMI)$268,500$1,074,000$6,578/moNo LMI
10% deposit$134,250$1,208,250$7,400/moLMI likely
5% deposit (First Home Guarantee)$67,125$1,275,375$7,811/moLMI likely
!

Affordability: about 11.8× local household income

At the median house price, this is a serious stretch. A typical local household earns $114,088/year (Census); to service an 80% loan comfortably (repayments ≤30% of income) you'd want roughly $263,117 in gross household income. Repayments shown assume a 6.2% owner-occupier rate over 30 years — check current rates.

Stamp duty, the first-home-buyer exemption (≤$600k) / concession ($600k–$750k) and the $10,000 First Home Owner Grant (new homes ≤$750k) use current Victorian State Revenue Office rules — indicative only. Confirm your position with the SRO calculator and your lender. Third-party costs are typical market ranges.

Investment potential — yield & growth

The two numbers investors actually weigh: rental yield (income now) and capital-growth track record (upside later), plus a fundamentals-based fair-value check and the forward supply that shapes both.

$1,342,500Median house (Oct-Dec 2025)
$867,000Median unit
-9.4%House growth, 1yr
4.3%Top gross house yield
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Indicative gross yield around 3.3–4.3% for houses

Based on the suburb's median house price against real bond-lodged rents for the Fitzroy rental region (thousands of active bonds, so a reliable signal). This is a gross figure — before council rates, insurance, management, maintenance and any vacancy — and uses the area median, not this specific house's likely rent. Inner suburbs like this typically yield less than the outer ring, with the case resting more on capital growth and scarcity than rental income.

Rental yield by house size

DwellingMedian rentGross yieldActive bonds
2 Bedroom House$848/wk3.3%52
3 Bedroom House$1,100/wk4.3%48

Rents: DFFH bond lodgements, Fitzroy rental region, latest quarter.

Capital growth track record

The median house price moved from $945,000 (2013) to $1,750,000 (2024) — a compound growth rate of about 5.8% a year over 11 years. Past performance isn't a forecast especially with the large forward supply pipeline.

Fundamentals-based fair value: $1,835,000

Our hedonic model (trained on 342 Greater Melbourne suburbs, out-of-sample R²=0.752) estimates what a typical house here "should" cost from location, income, schools, transport and crime. The actual median sits 27% below that — a statistically confident gap (90% band -35% to -20%). Suburb-level, not a valuation of this specific home.

What buyers here are actually paying for

The model's price estimate broken down versus a typical Greater Melbourne suburb — the factors pushing Fitzroy's value up (+) and down (−):

% work from home+269,300
Tram stops+203,000
% bachelor+ degree+191,400
Crime rate-114,700
Distance to CBD+54,300
Distance to school+45,600
Distance to coast/water+38,200
Socio-economic advantage (SEIFA)-31,300

Median price by year (last 8 years)

Type20172018201920202021202220232024
House$1,625,000$1,450,000$1,400,000$1,400,000$1,520,000$1,502,500$1,530,000$1,750,000
Unit$701,000$720,000$750,000$770,000$874,000$801,000$825,000$767,500

New-supply pipeline

62 dwellings approved for construction in Fitzroy over the most recent 12 months of ABS data. Heavy forward supply is the key caution on capital growth here — more competing new stock than in established, land-constrained suburbs.

Transport & getting around

Distances to transport and everyday amenities, plus how people here actually commute.

Train: Victoria Park Railway Station1.3 km
Tram: Leicester St/Brunswick St #17148 m
Bus stop: Napier St/Johnston St228 m
Supermarket210 m
Cafe76 m
Restaurant88 m
Pharmacy325 m
Park/open space318 m
Hospital1.2 km
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The commute reality

You're about 2 km from the CBD. Most residents drive (17% commute by car); only 1% take the train, and 48% work from home — high, and a big part of how this distance is made livable. The nearest station is a drive or bus ride from here, so factor parking or a feeder bus into a rail commute. Realistically plan for a car-dependent lifestyle this far out.

Schools

Zoned schools are the government school(s) this address has a guaranteed enrolment right to, per the Victorian school-zone boundaries — always confirm current boundaries with the Department of Education before relying on this.

Zoned government primary school: Fitzroy Primary School
Nearest primary school (any sector): Fitzroy Primary School362 m
Zoned government secondary school(s): Collingwood College
Nearest secondary school (any sector): Academy Of Mary Immaculate939 m

Safety & crime

Recorded criminal incidents from the Crime Statistics Agency, turned into the question buyers actually ask: is this a safe part of town, relative to nearby suburbs?

282 offences per 1,000 residents — one of the safer suburbs in Yarra

Fitzroy ranks 2 of 9 nearby suburbs by crime rate (1 = highest). It has a lower recorded offence rate than nearby Collingwood. Crime rate is incidents divided by population, so it fairly compares suburbs of different sizes.

← safer  ·  higher crime →

What kind of crime (Yarra council area)

Property offences dominate (70%) — theft, burglary, criminal damage — the usual pattern in most suburbs, rather than crimes against people. This mix is council-wide, the most local breakdown published.

Property (70%)Person (12%)Justice procedures (9%)Public order (4%)Drug (5%)

Neighbourhood snapshot — Fitzroy

Suburb-level context (ABS Census 2021 + Victoria in Future 2036 forecasts) — applies to the whole suburb, not just this address.

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Who lives here

Fitzroy is mixed-age, made up of smaller households and quite multicultural — median age 35, average household 2.0 people, 40% born overseas with 23% speaking a language other than English at home. It's largely renter-occupied (38% owners · 59% renters), and fast-changing — 25% of residents moved in within the last year, typical of a growth area still filling out.

Population

10,431

2021 Census

Forecast growth to 2036

+42%

population, Vic. in Future

Median age

35

Avg household size

2.0

people per household

Born overseas

40%

Bachelor+ degree

69%

of residents 15+

Owner-occupied

38%

· 59% renters

Unemployment

4.5%

2021 Census

Work from home

48%

vs 1% commute by train

SEIFA advantage decile

4/10

socio-economic advantage, relative to all Australia

Nearby infrastructure investment

State-government infrastructure projects (Victorian Budget infrastructure pipeline) located near this address.

Fitzroy Primary School (Education)0.3 km
Cooling our public housing towers (Public Housing)0.8 km
Cooling our public housing towers (Public Housing)0.9 km

Risks & opportunities at a glance

The signals worth weighing, ranked — each links to the section that explains it in full.

⚠ Risks & red flags
Heritage Overlay Can materially restrict renovation, extension or demolition. Always check the specific heritage citation for what's actually protected (the whole building, or just the street-facing facade) before assuming a full rebuild is possible. → Overlays
✓ Opportunities
Suburb priced 27% below fundamentals Model fair value $1,835,000 vs actual $1,342,500 median — a confident gap (undervalued — catching up). Suburb-level, not this property. → Investment

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What to check before you buy

A due-diligence checklist tailored to what this report found — and, just as importantly, to what it could NOT check.

What this report is — and isn't. Every fact above is traced to a named, free, public Victorian Government or ABS dataset (see the footer). It is genuinely useful for understanding the land: its zoning, planning history, overlays, proximity to transport/schools/amenities, and the surrounding suburb's market and demographic trends.

Built entirely from free, public Victorian & Commonwealth datasets: Vicmap Planning (zones, overlays & gazetted history), ABS Census 2021, ABS building approvals, VGV property sales, DFFH Rental Report (bond lodgements), ATO taxation statistics, PTV/GTFS stops, Victorian school locations & zones, Crime Statistics Agency, Victoria in Future projections, and the Victorian Budget infrastructure pipeline. Stamp duty & grant figures use current State Revenue Office rules (indicative). Not a valuation, not legal or financial advice.