125 Martin Cres Benarkin North QLD 4314
125 Martin Cres Benarkin North QLD 4314
Semi-rural acreage | 2.68ha with sheds | Bushfire overlay | Fixed Wireless NBN
This property presents a clear trade-off: the operational cost and insurance implications of the bushfire overlay directly impact holding costs and must be factored into any offer. The established workshop and substantial sheds offer immediate utility for a hobbyist or tradesperson, creating a tangible income or cost-saving opportunity. For a buyer seeking space and functionality over urban convenience, this represents a viable long-term hold, best suited as a primary residence leveraging its full scope.
Its competitive strength lies in the rare combination of substantial, usable outbuildings on a fully fenced block within a known residential street of 51 properties, providing a settled community context rare for acreage. The dual living areas implied by two bathrooms enhance flexibility for a family or live-work arrangement. This property serves a specific buyer profile: those prioritizing private space, practical amenities, and self-sufficiency, for whom the bushfire management burden is an acceptable compromise for the land utility.
Your next step is to commission a bushfire attack level assessment to quantify the risk mitigation costs, which will define your negotiation position.
Detailed Independent Property Report prepared by PropCred Analyst team for 125 Martin Cres Benarkin North QLD 4314
Market Insight:
Benarkin North QLD 4314 is drawing buyers after affordable acreage and a quiet rural lifestyle, appealing especially to retirees, tree?changers and owner?occupiers seeking space within reach of Kingaroy and nearby regional centres. Strengths are lifestyle appeal, low supply and relative value, while risks include a very small transaction pool, an ageing local demographic and limited local employment that can magnify short?term volatility; upside depends on continued regional migration and spill?over affordability from South?East Queensland. Over the past six months prices have been broadly flat to slightly down, with low volumes making movements patchy rather than directional.