Schools draw Chinese buyers to Melbourne’s southeast

Schools draw Chinese buyers to Melbourne’s southeast
Nicola TrotmanDecember 7, 2020

The southeastern suburbs of Melbourne – particularly Glen Waverley and Mount Waverley – are proving to be hotspots with Chinese buyers looking to further their children’s education and invest in small businesses.

Glen Waverley, 19 kilometres southeast of Melbourne CBD, is a popular spot for Chinese buyers –  both Australian residents and offshore –  wanting to move into the Monash school zone, which boasts a vast number of primary and secondary schools.

Residents of Chinese descent account for almost a quarter of the southeastern suburb population (10,477 people of the 39,204 population according to the 2011 census).

The average house price in Glen Waverley is $720,000, and families account for 79% of households.

A spokesperson for Ray White Glen Waverley says the majority of Chinese home owners buy in Glen Waverley for education, and secondly for the shopping and transportation.

Where a child can attend school is determined by his or her primary and permanent place of residence – upon enrolling, proof of residence must be shown.

If a student lives in a school zone, a place is reserved for him or her at the schools allocated to that zone.

A student can apply for schools in other zones, but being accepted depends on the availability of places at the chosen school, with those within the zone given first preference.

Other factors such as distance, curriculum, social and family links, transport and location convenience are all considered by the school.

Glen Waverley also is home to further education institutions such as Homesglen TAFE, and not far away is Box Hill TAFE.

A three-bedroom, two-bathroom home on Delmore Crescent (pictured below) recently sold at auction for $765,500.

schoolsmarch27one

Situated on a 680-square-metre lot, it is within walking distance to public transport and located close to Glendal Primary, St Christopher’s Primary, Wesley College and Mount Waverley Secondary School.

It was listed by Tony Levoli from Barry Plant Monash.

 


The neighbouring suburb Mount Waverley is also popular with Chinese buyers, with 5,030 residents of Chinese descent within the 32,076 population, according to the 2011 census.

The median house price in Mount Waverley is $725,500 and family households account for almost 74%.

A five-bedroom, two-bathroom home on Catherine Avenue (pictured below) sold on March 2 for $731,000.

schoolsmarch27two

Situated on a 672-square-metre lot, the sale was closed by Buxton real estate Oakleigh.

Last year Property Observer reported on a free-standing Ritchies IGA in Mount Waverley that sold to an Asian Melbourne-based buyer for nearly $700,000 above the reserve.

The supermarket attracted more than 23 enquiries from offshore Asian buyers prior to its auction date.

Many of the bids included the number 88 – the Asian symbol of good fortune and good luck.

The supermarket had a $6.5 million reserve and eventually sold for $7.19 million.

“Locally based Asian investors generally like to buy commercial property investment with a value of up to $5 million,” says Mark Wizel from CBRE.

“Small Asian investors [who live around the eastern suburbs] tend to buy retail properties that have solid performing tenants.”

“There is little doubt that the Chinese people feel comfortable in Melbourne and have a great understanding of the way the local market works,” says Wizel.

For more on the allure of Australian property to Asian buyers, download our free eBook. The eBook is also available for free download in Chinese.

Photo courtesy of ClarkeHopkinsClarke.

Nicola Trotman

With a penchant for the written word, Nicola has built a career doing just this – now Creative Director at thriving Melbourne-based PR agency, Greenpoint Media.

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