17 Village Circuit, Gregory Hills NSW 2557
17 Village Circuit, Gregory Hills NSW 2557
vacant land cost | double storey on 374sqm | strong rental offset | buyer paid full build premium
This property cost you the unimproved land value plus the full cost of construction, so your entry price carries no developer margin to absorb. The floor planβ175sqm with 47% site coverage and dedicated media roomβtrades well in a suburb where most new stock offers one living zone. Rental demand at $910-$965 per week covers roughly 85% of holding costs at mid-range value, which reduces carry risk. Hold through the Gregory Hills High School catchment phase; the demographics support capital stability, not rapid appreciation.
Two competitive advantages justify paying near the estimate range. First, the formal lounge with gabled ceiling is rare in volume-built double-storey houses under 400sqmβit gives you a point of difference for both family living and future resale. Second, the lot sits above flood overlay, bushfire risk and heritage controls, which removes three common due diligence hurdles. This property suits a buyer who wants a turnkey family home with a proven rental buffer and minimal discovery risk; if you need land banking or subdivision upside, look elsewhere.
Comparable vacant lot transfers in the Gregory Hills estate averaged $360-$380k in 2018, and build costs at that time ran approximately $750-$850 per square metre. The implied total replacement cost sits within the current estimate range, supporting the view that you are paying replacement price, not speculative premium.
Independent, Unbiased Research Report for this property by PropCred Analyst teamΒ
Market Insight:
Gregory Hills is a rapidly growing family-oriented suburb, with demand driven by young professionals and couples with children seeking houses in a new community. Recent price growth has been strong, reflecting this sustained demand and a clear preference for houses over units. Future growth is underpinned by its established momentum and demographic appeal, though its relative newness presents typical supply and infrastructure considerations for a developing area.