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Investment Property in Tasmania: The Best Suburbs for Rental Yields in 2026

Which Tasmania suburbs deliver the best rental yields and capital growth for property investors in 2026?

By The Daily Tasmania · Published 18 June 2026 at 8:46 pm Updated

Updated 27 June 2026 at 12:13 pm

3 min read

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Investment Property in Tasmania: The Best Suburbs for Rental Yields in 2026
Photo: Photo by Mitchell Henderson on Pexels

Tasmania's rental market in 2026 remains one of the tightest in Australia by vacancy rate. The statewide vacancy rate has hovered below 1.5 per cent for the past 18 months, meaning well-presented rental properties in most suburbs lease within days of listing. This sustained low vacancy is driven by a combination of limited new supply coming to market, steady population growth, and the state's growing appeal among remote workers and lifestyle seekers relocating from the mainland. For property investors, this environment translates into strong rent retention, minimal voids between tenancies, and consistent rental income growth across both Hobart and regional markets like Launceston and Burnie.

Gross rental yields in Tasmania vary meaningfully between asset classes. Units and apartments are currently the stronger performers, with gross yields averaging 4.5 to 6 per cent across Greater Hobart depending on the suburb and property type. Houses generally yield between 3 to 4.5 per cent gross, which remains respectable but reflects the higher capital value relative to achievable rents. The yield gap between units and houses makes apartments particularly attractive for investors prioritising cashflow over pure capital growth. With interest rates still elevated in 2026, positive cashflow or near-cashflow-neutral properties are commanding premium investor interest, and units in locations close to employment, hospitals and universities are the sweet spot.

Four specific suburbs are showing strong investor fundamentals in 2026. Sandy Bay, in Hobart's inner south, delivers consistent demand from University of Tasmania students and medical professionals at the nearby Royal Hobart Hospital, with gross unit yields around 5 to 5.5 per cent. Devonport, on the north-west coast, is benefiting from infrastructure investment tied to the Spirit of Tasmania ferry terminal redevelopment and offers house yields of around 5 to 6 per cent. Invermay in Launceston sits adjacent to the city's health and education precinct and generates strong unit yields driven by student and healthcare worker demand. Warrane, on Hobart's eastern shore, is an emerging investor favourite with affordable entry prices around $480,000 to $530,000 and solid rental returns supported by its proximity to Hobart Airport and the broader eastern corridor.

Tasmania landlords should account for several key cost factors when assessing net investment returns. Property management fees in Tasmania typically run between 7 and 9 per cent of gross rent, with some regional agents charging marginally more. Maintenance costs on older Tasmanian housing stock can be higher than newer builds, particularly for properties with original roofing, plumbing or electrical systems. Investors should engage a quantity surveyor to prepare a depreciation schedule for any property built after 1987, as depreciation deductions can materially improve after-tax returns. Land tax thresholds and rates in Tasmania should also be factored in for multi-property investors, as the aggregated land value across all holdings is used to calculate the liability.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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Published by The Daily Tasmania

This article was produced by the The Daily Tasmania editorial desk and covers finance in Tasmania. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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