Victorian hamlet of Merino heads national list of $100,000 home buy towns: Realestate.com.au

Victorian hamlet of Merino heads national list of $100,000 home buy towns: Realestate.com.au
Jonathan ChancellorJuly 3, 20123 min read

Merino, the Western Districts, Victoria hamlet located 363 kilometres west of Melbourne, has emerged as among the cheapest towns to buy across Australia.

The list, which has 36 towns with $100,000 house offerings, was compiled by realestate.com.au from its May listings. There are 10 locations given in NSW for $100,000 towns, including Barraba, Broken Hill, and Coonamble. There are five in Queensland and South Australia, three in Tasmania and six in Western Australia with $100,000 offerings. Merino is one of seven towns in Victoria with $100,000 offerings, the others including Donald and Inverloch. Both the ACT and Northern Territory did not have $100,000 house offerings, according to the listings website survey.

Merino, Victoria's first inland settlement, has a population of about 364 spread over about 197 dwellings based on the 2011 census.

There are current just four listings on realestate.com.au with prices ranging from $100,000 (pictured above) to $185,000

There’s also a $170,000  listing.

The other offering is at $30,000, but it’s just a 1,998-square-metre township zoned  block with shedding.

It had its first European settlement in 1837 when Francis Henty established Merino Downs pastoral station.

A store and post office agency came in 1854, and the first town lots were sold the next year.

In the 1850s, 1860s and 1870s came construction of churches, hotels, schools and the courthouse.

The Merino co-operative butter factory was established around 1885.

After World War 1the area was opened up for soldier settlement.

 

Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

Jonathan Chancellor

Jonathan Chancellor

Jonathan Chancellor is one of Australia's most respected property journalists, having been at the top of the game since the early 1980s. Jonathan co-founded the property industry website Property Observer and has written for national and international publications.

Editor's Picks

Construction steaming ahead at iconic Sydney House mixed-use landmark
"A new benchmark for buyer protection" INCA takes out Resilience LDI at Ellis Residences, St Ives
Deicorp breaks ground on $1 billion Showground Pavilions in Castle Hill
Where to buy a new apartment on the Sunshine Coast in 2025
First look: Rose Bay's downsizer push continues