33 JACKSON Avenue Moranbah QLD 4744
33 JACKSON Avenue Moranbah QLD 4744
3 bed house |770mΒ² lot |4 car parking | Listed $440k | Last sold $320k | Recent upgrades| This three-bedroom house on a 770sqm block with four car spaces suits mining families or couples needing generous off-street parking in a resource town setting. The substantial land size offers practical scope for backyard expansion or simply low-maintenance outdoor living, setting it apart from tighter lots nearby. Its position on Jackson Avenue places it amid similar family homes, providing a quiet street feel without isolation from Moranbah’s core amenities. Buyers drawn to properties like this typically include fly-in fly-out workers valuing the ample parking for multiple vehicles and the single bathroom’s simplicity for low-occupancy use. Recently refreshed with new paint and flooring, it presents as move-in ready, which supports a quicker sale in a market where renovated homes under $500k move steadily. The jump from its last sale at $320,000 to the current $440,000 listing reflects tightening local supply for larger blocks, with comparables holding firm amid coal sector demand. Long-term, the 770sqm parcel underpins holding value, as land scarcity in Moranbah favours future subdivision potential or value retention through economic cycles. Overall, it positions as a pragmatic hold in a niche where utility trumps flash, appealing to steady local demand.
Independent, Unbiased Research Report for this property by PropCred Analyst teamΒ
Market Insight:
Major Bowen Basin miners keep rental demand taut in Moranbah, with high yields above 13% pulling investors who can cash in on firm weekly rents while the FIFO workforce anchors the townΒs population base.
House medians near $395k and units around $388k are roughly 10% and 19% higher than a year ago, so the past six months have simply kept that momentum alive even as only about 113 homes were listed while hundreds of buyers chase new supply.
Reliance on coal exports keeps the market tied to commodity cycles, yet Isaac CouncilΒs 2025 affordable housing delivery shows locals are responding with more product, matching the wider Central Queensland mining-town lift that still makes Moranbah attractive despite the usual boom-bust sensitivity.