STATE
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A university city on the New England Tablelands with 30% of its population aged 15 to 34. C3 Summit Church has grown steadily to 146 people under its founding pastor, who is preparing to retire after 20 years. A growing congregation, an owned building, and a city full of young adults — this is a rare opportunity.
Jordan Springs is a young families' suburb on Penrith's northern edge, built around lakes and bushland on what was once defence land. Llandilo, just to the north, holds onto its semi-rural character with horse paddocks and acre blocks.
Tarneit is one of Melbourne's fastest-growing suburbs, a multicultural family-heavy outer-west community where former farmland is being turned into housing estates faster than churches can keep up. The harvest field is enormous and visibly under-resourced.
Mango Hill is a young, master-planned suburb 25 kilometres north of Brisbane, where two train stations, new estates and a steady inflow of young families have turned former bushland into one of south-east Queensland's fastest-growing communities.
Keysborough's southern edge is where Melbourne's market gardens are quietly turning into master-planned estates. Multicultural, family-heavy, with a young median age and a quarter of residents holding no religion, it sits in the south-east just inside the EastLink ring.
Twenty kilometres south-east of Perth, Huntingdale and Southern River sit side by side: the older 1970s pocket meeting the rapid 1990s-onward family suburb. Big blocks, young families, a community still forming.
Cranbourne East is one of Melbourne's fastest-growing south-eastern suburbs, a sprawl of new estates filling with young families, tradies and migrant communities. Median age 31, two-thirds families with children, and still being built.
Beechboro is a multicultural pocket of north-east Perth where state housing meets first-home buyers, big block sizes meet new infill estates, and the Swan Valley sits twenty minutes up the road. Young families, working class, growing fast.
Wentworth Point is a vertical waterfront suburb on the Parramatta River, built almost entirely from apartment towers in fifteen years. Young, deeply multicultural, and missing almost everything a traditional church plant assumes about its neighbourhood.
Wallan was a country town until about ten years ago. Now it's one of Melbourne's fastest-growing northern fringe townships, where new estates spread across former farmland and young families are pouring in for affordable land and a V/Line ride to the city.
A coastal stretch of outer southern Perth where surf beaches, dunes and new estates meet. Singleton, Golden Bay and Secret Harbour are filling fast with young families chasing affordable beachside living an hour from the city.
Redbank Plains is one of south-east Queensland's fastest-growing suburbs. A young, multicultural, family-heavy community sitting between Ipswich and Brisbane, where housing is still just affordable enough to draw thousands of new arrivals every year.
Pallara-Willawong is one of Brisbane's fastest growing pockets, where bushland is becoming master-planned estates almost overnight. Young families are pouring in. The community is still figuring out who it is.
The northern half of the Hoddle Grid: Queen Victoria Market, RMIT, State Library, high-rise apartment towers full of international students. A young, secular, transient population sitting at the dense heart of Melbourne.
Marsden Park barely existed a decade ago. Now it's one of Sydney's fastest-building growth fronts, where house-and-land buyers, young families and recent migrants are forming a brand new community on what used to be paddocks.
Greenvale was paddocks two decades ago. Now it's the Toorak of Melbourne's north, a family-heavy growth area sitting between the airport and the Hume, with new estates pushing further into former farmland every year.
Ten kilometres south-east of Perth, Cannington and Queens Park sit at a hinge point: Westfield Carousel, an upgraded Metronet station, and an unusually young, multicultural population pouring into a long-overlooked corner of the city.
Baringa is the first suburb of Aura, Australia's largest master-planned community. Built from former pine plantation since 2017, it's filling fast with young families, first-home buyers and interstate movers chasing the southern Sunshine Coast.
Box Hill and Nelson are Sydney's north-west growth frontier. A decade ago, paddocks and acreage. Today, thousands of new homes filling with young families chasing space, schools and a fresh start in the Hills.
Baldivis was paddocks twenty years ago. Now it is one of Perth's fastest-growing residential areas, a young, family-heavy outer south-west suburb where new estates keep coming and the community is still figuring out who it is.
Albion Park sits in the Macquarie Valley between the Illawarra escarpment and the coast, a fast-growing town of young families spilling out toward Tullimbar and Calderwood. Old dairy country becoming new suburbs, faster than the community can quite keep up with.
Thornton was a quiet rail-line suburb a generation ago. Now it's the fastest-growing pocket of Maitland, a young-family belt of new estates and old streets sitting between Newcastle and the Hunter Valley.
Twenty-two kilometres south of Perth, Success and Hammond Park are family-heavy growth suburbs in the City of Cockburn. New estates, young parents at the school gate, and a community still figuring out who it is.
Paddocks turning into streets at the western edge of Melbourne. Rockbank and Mount Cottrell sit at the front line of the Melton growth area, where young families are arriving faster than the shops, schools and footpaths can keep up.
Piara Waters was paddocks fifteen years ago. Now it's a young-family suburb of new estates, primary schools and a brand-new high school, sitting on Perth's south-eastern edge with the Piara Nature Reserve at its heart.
Mascot sits seven kilometres south of Sydney's CBD, wedged between the airport and the inner south. Half its residents are aged 15 to 34. It's a high-rise suburb of Mandarin-speaking professionals, Indonesian students and young renters in transit.
Twelve kilometres west of the Sydney CBD, Homebush is one of the most culturally diverse suburbs in the country. A young, fast-growing inner-west community where Tamil, Mandarin, Korean and Hindi are heard on every street.
Wollert was farmland a decade ago. Now it's one of Melbourne's fastest-growing suburbs, a sea of new estates filling the gap between Epping and Mernda with young families, new arrivals and brand-new streets still finding their identity.
Oran Park barely existed fifteen years ago. Today it is one of the fastest-growing suburbs in New South Wales, a master-planned town built on the old raceway, full of young families and brand-new streets still finding their identity.
Gledswood Hills and Gregory Hills are master-planned suburbs on Sydney's south-west edge, growing fast around new schools, a new town centre and a hospital precinct. Young families, mortgaged to the hilt, building a community from scratch.
Fraser Rise and Plumpton are two of Melbourne's newest suburbs, carved out of paddocks north-west of the city. Young families pour in week by week, churches are scarce, and the community is still figuring out who it is.
Cranbourne West has more than doubled in a decade, paddocks turning into estates almost in real time. It's young, family-heavy, culturally mixed and growing fast. The community is still figuring out who it is.
A young, family-heavy suburb 30 kilometres north of Perth, carved out of bushland in the mid-90s and still filling in. Carramar pairs new estates and golf-course living with a noticeably high First Nations population.
Byford was a rural township a generation ago. Now it's one of Perth's fastest-growing south-eastern suburbs, where young families on big blocks are reshaping a town that still remembers its hobby farms and brickworks.
Wellard West and Bertram sit on Perth's southern edge, a fast-growing pocket of the City of Kwinana where young families on tradie wages are buying their first homes around the Mandurah railway line.
Murrumba Downs and Griffin sit either side of the North Pine River, 25 kilometres north of Brisbane. Two suburbs growing fast on family money, train-line access and new estates rising out of what was farmland a decade ago.
Munno Para West and Angle Vale sit on Adelaide's northern edge, where former farmland is being turned into housing estates almost as fast as crews can lay the kerbs. Young families, first-home buyers and a notable Kaurna and broader Aboriginal community are putting down roots together.
Burdell and Mount Low are Townsville's fastest-growing northern suburbs. New estates, young families, and a tradie-and-services workforce filling out paddocks that were empty a decade ago.
Brabham was paddocks fifteen years ago. Now it is one of Perth's fastest-growing suburbs, sitting beside historic Henley Brook on the western edge of the Swan Valley, with new estates, new rail, and a young population that has barely settled in.
Banjup is the rural-residential heart of Cockburn's fastest-growing belt, where five-acre lifestyle blocks meet new family estates pushing south from Perth. Young families, big blocks, and a community still figuring out who it is.
Aveley is a master-planned suburb on Perth's north-eastern edge, sitting next to Ellenbrook in the City of Swan. Young families dominate, the streets are new, and a generation of kids is growing up here all at once.
Alkimos-Eglinton barely existed a decade ago. Now it's one of the fastest-growing patches of coastline in Australia, where young families are buying their first homes within sight of the Indian Ocean and a brand-new train line.
Werribee West sits at the heart of Melbourne's fastest-growing local government area, a culturally rich and rapidly expanding city-suburb where young families, new migrants and first-home buyers are reshaping what the western edge of the city looks like.
Mickleham-Yuroke is the fastest-growing suburb in the country. Paddocks become streets in months, the median age is thirty, and two-thirds of households are families with kids. A young suburb still figuring out who it is.
Once paddocks and small holdings, Cranbourne South is now one of Melbourne's fastest-growing semi-rural pockets. New estates push south from Cranbourne, the Royal Botanic Gardens sit on the doorstep, and young families are pouring in.
Coomera was farmland a generation ago. Now it's the fastest-growing pocket of the northern Gold Coast, a young, family-heavy suburb still figuring out who it is between Brisbane and Surfers Paradise.
Schofields was paddocks fifteen years ago. Now it is a fast-rising suburb in Sydney's north-west growth area, full of new estates, young Indian-Australian families and freshly built schools still finding their rhythm.
Clyde North - South sits at the bleeding edge of Melbourne's south-east growth front. Bulldozers are still working. Estates are still being released. The community forming here is overwhelmingly young, family-heavy and culturally mixed.
Officer was paddocks a decade ago. Now it's one of Melbourne's fastest-growing suburbs, sitting beside leafy Beaconsfield in the south-east. New estates, young families, and a community still figuring out who it is.
Springfield Lakes sits inside Australia's largest master-planned city, a young-family suburb of lakes, parks and new schools rising fast on Brisbane's south-western edge. Population is climbing, families are pouring in, and the community is still figuring out who it is.
Ripley was paddocks not long ago. Now it's the spearhead of one of Australia's largest planned cities, with young families pouring in faster than the schools, shops and roads can keep up.
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