StreetScout

Largest suburbs in Victoria

The most populous suburbs and localities in Victoria, by usual resident count at the 2021 Census.

  1. 1

    Point Cook, VIC

    Population 66,781 · Median income $2,392/wk · SEIFA 1066

    Point Cook lies about 22 kilometres south-west of central Melbourne, on the shore of Port Phillip Bay in the City of Wyndham. Population: 66,781 at the 2021 Census (ABS 2021 Census QuickStats, SAL22086, Suburbs and Localities) — the largest single suburb in Australia. The suburb's character is simultaneously the Australia of the demographic future and the Australia of the family dream: newest-country population, high qualifications, mortgage-heavy homeownership, large houses, young families. Only 43.9% of residents were born in Australia. 70.2% have both parents born overseas. Indian ancestry is reported by 17.4% of residents (Victoria: 4.3%). Residents from 86 distinct countries of birth are represented (minimum 20 residents per country), making it the most multicultural suburb in Australia by that measure (id.com.au analysis of ABS 2021 Census, reported ABC News 7 July 2022). English is the only language spoken at home in 44.3% of households. Median age: 33 — five years below the national figure. Median weekly household income: $2,392, 37% above the national median. Bachelor degree or above: 41.1%, 58% above the national rate. 88.0% of dwellings are separate houses; 69.5% have four or more bedrooms. 59.6% of adults are married (national: 46.5%). Labour force participation: 71.4% (national: 61.1%). 16.1% of residents practise Hinduism — five times the national rate. Only 14.9% of homes are owned outright (national: 31.0%): Point Cook is almost entirely a mortgaged suburb, a community still in the act of building.

  2. 2

    Craigieburn, VIC

    Population 65,178 · Median income $1,798/wk · SEIFA 956

    Craigieburn sits about 25 kilometres north of central Melbourne, a satellite suburb on the city's northern urban-rural fringe in the City of Hume, rising towards Mount Ridley at its edge. The Wurundjeri people are the first people of the area. The suburb takes its name from an old bluestone inn that once served travellers along the Old Sydney Road; the name joins the Gaelic craigie, meaning craggy, with the Scots word burn, a stream. Craigieburn was a small farming hamlet by the 1860s, gained a railway station on the line to Seymour in 1872, and stayed quiet until 1972, when the first big residential subdivision began its transformation into one of Melbourne's major growth suburbs. The Hume Highway, which long ran through the centre, was diverted around the town by the Craigieburn Bypass in 2005, and the railway line was electrified through to Craigieburn in 2007. Today it is a large, fast-growing and notably multicultural suburb with extensive new estates, shopping centres and sporting facilities.

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    Tarneit, VIC

    Population 56,370 · Median income $2,103/wk · SEIFA 1010

    Tarneit is a rapidly growing outer suburb of Melbourne, about 25 km west of the city centre in the City of Wyndham. The Boonwurrung people of the Kulin nation were the first inhabitants of the area. European settlers used the land for grazing from the 1830s, and the name — recorded when the district was surveyed in 1839–1840 — is said to come from a Wadawurrung word for the colour white. Tarneit stayed rural and sparsely settled until large-scale residential subdivision began in the early 2000s, with much of today's arterial road network still following an early square-mile grid. One of the few colonial-era landmarks is Doherty's House, a bluestone homestead built in the 1870s, whose walls and chimney survive a later fire. The suburb's growth was transformed by the Regional Rail Link, which opened in 2015 with a new Tarneit station offering a faster route into the city than the older Werribee line.

  4. 4

    Melbourne, VIC

    Population 54,941 · Median income $1,448/wk · SEIFA 1076

    Melbourne is the central city locality and commercial heart of greater Melbourne, set on the north bank of the Yarra River in Victoria. Its streets follow the Hoddle Grid, the one-mile rectangle laid out by surveyor Robert Hoddle in 1837; the settlement was first known as Bearbrass and renamed that year after the British prime minister Lord Melbourne. The area is the traditional Country of the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin nation. Today it is a major financial, retail and cultural centre, home to Flinders Street Station, Federation Square, the State Library of Victoria and the Queen Victoria Market, and laced with trams, laneways and arcades. Once chiefly commercial, the centre now houses thousands of apartment residents, students and young professionals.

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    Pakenham, VIC

    Population 54,118 · Median income $1,664/wk · SEIFA 958

    Pakenham is a suburb on the south-eastern edge of Melbourne, about 53 km from the central business district and the most populous town in the Shire of Cardinia. It lies in the traditional Country of the Kulin nation, with the Boon Wurrung people recognised as local custodians. The town was named after Sir Edward Pakenham, a British major general who served in the Peninsular War and was killed at the Battle of New Orleans in 1815. European families took up large land selections in the district from the late 1830s, and a railway station opened in 1877 on the line linking Melbourne to Gippsland. Over recent decades Pakenham has become one of the city's major growth areas, its population and infrastructure expanding rapidly through estates such as Lakeside, Heritage Springs and Cardinia Lakes. The suburb sits on the Princes Highway, with a bypass carrying through-traffic around the centre, and is served by several railway stations marking the end of Melbourne's electrified suburban network.

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    Reservoir (Vic.), VIC

    Population 51,096 · Median income $1,541/wk · SEIFA 988

    Reservoir sits about twelve kilometres north of central Melbourne, within the City of Darebin. The land was first surveyed by Robert Hoddle in 1837 and drew its boundaries from the earlier Jika Jika and Keelbundoora parishes. The Rose Shamrock Hotel opened on Plenty Road in 1854, and a post office followed around 1921, by which time Reservoir had taken shape as a suburb. Its name comes from a trio of water reservoirs first built in 1863 and known collectively as the Preston Reservoir, which still helps supply Melbourne's inner and western suburbs; the Maroondah Aqueduct was added between 1886 and 1891 to feed them. In 1914 Thomas Dyer Edwardes gave the City of Preston some thirty-four acres of land, later developed into Edwardes Lake Park. Today the suburb mixes established brick and weatherboard homes with newer developments, and is served by the Edwardes Street and Broadway shopping strips.

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    Berwick, VIC

    Population 50,298 · Median income $2,113/wk · SEIFA 1043

    Berwick lies about 41 kilometres south-east of central Melbourne, within the City of Casey. An early leaseholder, Robert Gardiner, named it after his birthplace of Berwick-on-Tweed on the Scottish border. The district began as part of the Cardinia Creek pastoral run, and subdivision from 1854 brought a store, post office, hotel and a flour mill, with wheat, barley and potatoes giving way over time to dairying and cheese-making. The Berwick Agricultural Society, traced back to 1848, is among the oldest farming societies in Victoria. A quarry opened in 1859 to supply ballast for the railway that arrived in 1877; its worked-out pit is now the Wilson Botanic Park. The Mechanics' Institute and Free Library dates from 1862, and the poplars lining High Street were planted as an Avenue of Honour to the district's First World War dead. Parts of the 1959 film On the Beach were shot locally, and several streets carry the names of its cast. As Melbourne spread eastward late in the twentieth century the surrounding farmland was subdivided and the population grew quickly through the 1990s and 2000s. Berwick was the home of Edwin 'Teddy' Flack, Australia's first Olympian, who won two running golds at the 1896 Athens Games and is buried in the local cemetery.

  8. 8

    Werribee, VIC

    Population 50,027 · Median income $1,645/wk · SEIFA 951

    Werribee is a fast-growing suburb on Melbourne's south-western edge, about thirty-two kilometres from the city and the administrative centre of the City of Wyndham. It sits on the Werribee River roughly midway between Melbourne and Geelong, and takes its name from an Aboriginal word of the Wadawurrung and Boonwurrung languages said to mean 'backbone' or 'spine'. Laid out as a farming township in the 1850s, it was first called Wyndham and was renamed Werribee in 1904, by which time the Melbourne-to-Geelong railway had given it a station. The grand pastoral estate of Thomas Chirnside survives as Werribee Park, and the suburb is best known today for that mansion and its gardens, the Victoria State Rose Garden, and the Werribee Open Range Zoo.

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    Glen Waverley, VIC

    Population 42,642 · Median income $1,918/wk · SEIFA 1079

    Glen Waverley lies about 19 km south-east of central Melbourne and is the council seat of the City of Monash. Once orchard and farming country settled from the mid-nineteenth century, its post office opened in 1885 under the name Black Flat before the suburb was renamed Glen Waverley in 1921; the 'Waverley' is borrowed from a Sir Walter Scott novel. Rapid post-war development through the 1950s to 1970s filled it with houses on generously sized blocks, many now being renewed through subdivision. It was also home to Victoria's first McDonald's, opened in 1973 and for a time the longest-surviving in the country. Today Glen Waverley is a busy commercial and transport hub, anchored by The Glen shopping centre and the terminus of the Glen Waverley railway line.

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    Sunbury, VIC

    Population 38,851 · Median income $1,925/wk · SEIFA 1000

    Sunbury is a satellite town on the north-western fringe of Melbourne, within the City of Hume. It lies on the country of the Wurundjeri people, for whom a recorded name for the district is Koorakoorakup. Settlers arrived in the 1830s, and the brothers William and Samuel Jackson named the township after Sunbury-on-Thames in England when it was laid out in the 1850s. Sunbury's enduring claim to fame is Rupertswood, the grand mansion the Clarke family built in the 1870s: during the touring English cricket team's visit at Christmas 1882, Lady Clarke burnt a bail and presented the ashes in a small urn to the captain, Ivo Bligh — the origin of cricket's storied Ashes. The estate is now Salesian College, and in the early 1970s the district hosted the well-remembered Sunbury Pop Festival. Today it is a fast-growing commuter town close to Melbourne Airport.

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    St Albans (Vic.), VIC

    Population 38,042 · Median income $1,205/wk · SEIFA 866

    St Albans is a large, multicultural suburb about 17 kilometres north-west of central Melbourne, within the City of Brimbank. It was laid out as a township in 1887, when the Cosmopolitan Land and Banking Company subdivided the land during a speculative boom. The company's manager, Alfred Padley, arranged with Victorian Railways for a station, and insisted it be named St Albans after his family's connection with St Albans Cathedral in England. A post office followed in 1888, and the settlement grew slowly as a dormitory suburb for the factories of nearby Sunshine and Deer Park. After the Second World War its population surged with the arrival of migrants from Malta, Italy and the former Yugoslavia, who built a cluster of Orthodox and Catholic churches. More recent decades have brought a large Vietnamese community, and St Albans today is among Melbourne's most diverse suburbs.

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    Frankston, VIC

    Population 37,331 · Median income $1,387/wk · SEIFA 953

    Frankston sits on the eastern shore of Port Phillip about 39 km south-east of central Melbourne, and is the administrative heart of the City of Frankston. The land is the Country of the Boonwurrung people of the Kulin nation, long an important fishing ground and meeting place. A seaside destination since the 1880s, the suburb has one of Victoria's most popular and cleanest swimming beaches and is often called the 'gateway to the Mornington Peninsula' for the wine-and-tourism region just to its south. The origin of the name is uncertain, with several competing theories; a popular one links it to Frank Liardet, an early settler who took up land here in 1847. Official land sales established the village in 1854.

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    Hoppers Crossing, VIC

    Population 37,216 · Median income $1,580/wk · SEIFA 945

    Hoppers Crossing is a large residential suburb in Melbourne's outer south-west, roughly 24 kilometres from the central city and part of the City of Wyndham. The wider district lies on the Country of the Boonwurrung and Wadawurrung peoples, who belong to the Kulin nation, and whose traditional lands took in the volcanic plains around the Werribee River. The suburb takes its name from Elizabeth Hopper, who worked as a gatekeeper at the level crossing on what is now the Werribee railway line, opening and closing the heavy wooden gates whenever a train passed. She and her husband Stephen, a long-serving railway ganger, raised their large family nearby. Until the 1960s the area was mostly open farmland, but it grew quickly from the 1970s as Melbourne expanded westward, gaining its first primary school and railway station around 1970. Today it is a major suburban centre, anchored by the sprawling Pacific Werribee shopping complex.

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    Truganina, VIC

    Population 36,305 · Median income $2,126/wk · SEIFA 1020

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    Mount Waverley, VIC

    Population 35,340 · Median income $2,066/wk · SEIFA 1092

    Mount Waverley lies about 16 kilometres south-east of central Melbourne in the City of Monash. Assistant Surveyor Eugene Bellairs set out the district, then part of the Parish of Mulgrave, on a grid of straight roads exactly a mile apart in 1853, and the post office followed in 1905. The suburb is known for heritage streets laid out in the 1930s, among them the ambitious Glen Alvie estate near Mount Waverley Village, which was planned as a country-club garden suburb with tennis courts, a bowling green and palm-lined Sherwood Park; its original streets were laid in concrete rather than asphalt and survive much as they were. The Great Depression stalled building, and houses only rose in earnest from the early 1950s as Melbourne spread eastward. The much-loved Melbourne street directory Melway was first produced in a Mount Waverley garage in 1966. Today the suburb is a hub for electronics and IT firms, has a strong Chinese, Greek and Italian community, and keeps generous bushland reserves along Damper and Scotchmans Creeks.

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    Mildura, VIC

    Population 34,565 · Median income $1,295/wk · SEIFA 909

    Mildura is a city on the Murray River in the far north-west of Victoria, the largest centre of the Sunraysia district and close to the borders with New South Wales and South Australia. It lies on the lands of the Latji Latji and Ngintait peoples, and its name, taken from an early sheep station, is thought to come from an Aboriginal word, though its meaning is uncertain. In 1887 the Canadian-American engineer George Chaffey founded what is often called Australia's first irrigation colony here, turning dry mallee country into orchards and vineyards. Today Mildura is famed for its grapes, dried fruit and citrus, grown under near-constant sunshine, while paddle steamers and river cruises keep its Murray heritage alive.

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    Preston (Vic.), VIC

    Population 33,790 · Median income $1,844/wk · SEIFA 1040

    Preston is an established suburb about 9 km north-east of central Melbourne, within the City of Darebin. The area was first surveyed by Robert Hoddle in 1837, and its earliest settlement — named Irishtown after its first permanent resident arrived in 1841 — grew along High Street. When Edward Wood opened a store in 1850, members of a Baptist congregation meeting there chose to rename the district after Preston, a village in Sussex they remembered fondly. A post office followed in 1856. Preston developed a strong industrial character through the later nineteenth century, with tanneries, potteries, brickworks and bacon-curing factories drawing on local clay and farmland. The railway reached the suburb in 1889 and a tram line to the city opened in 1920, and Preston was proclaimed a city in 1926. The Northland Shopping Centre opened in 1966. Today Preston is known for its diverse, creative community — it inspired Courtney Barnett's song 'Depreston' and is home to 3KND, an Aboriginal-managed community radio station.

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    Rowville, VIC

    Population 33,571 · Median income $2,205/wk · SEIFA 1056

    Rowville is a large suburb in Melbourne's south-east, within the City of Knox, taking its name from the Row family whose property, Stamford Park, was established in 1882. The Stamford Park homestead still stands and has been restored by the council in recent years. A post office opened in 1905, but the area remained largely agricultural until the post-war decades: in 1955 a pair of entrepreneurs bought the historic Stamford Park estate with plans for housing, shops and display homes around the corner of Stud and Wellington Roads. Rapid growth followed through the 1980s and 1990s. Among the suburb's distinctive developments is Rowville Lakes, proposed by the developer Hooker-Rex in 1975 and noted as an early Victorian example of a lakefront housing estate. The Stud Park Shopping Centre, opened in 1989, remains the commercial hub, anchoring a suburb now well supplied with parks, schools and sporting clubs.

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    Epping (Vic.), VIC

    Population 33,489 · Median income $1,671/wk · SEIFA 955

    Epping is an outer northern suburb of Melbourne, about 18 kilometres from the central business district, within the City of Whittlesea. A village reserve was surveyed here in 1839, and the settlement was named Epping in 1853 after Epping Forest in England; a hotel had operated since 1844 and a post office opened in 1857. Early farming families, many of Irish origin, worked dairy farms and quarries, and a railway line from Melbourne reached the township in 1889. The original village stood on higher ground west of Darebin Creek, and several of its older buildings were raised in bluestone, plentiful across the surrounding volcanic plains. Major suburban growth followed from the 1970s. Today Epping centres on the Pacific Epping shopping centre and the adjoining Northern Hospital, while the local campus of Melbourne Polytechnic ranks among Victoria's largest providers of training to the agriculture sector.

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    Noble Park, VIC

    Population 32,257 · Median income $1,382/wk · SEIFA 901

    Noble Park is a suburb within the City of Greater Dandenong, about 25 kilometres south-east of central Melbourne. Population: 32,257 at the 2021 Census (ABS 2021 Census QuickStats, SAL21952, Suburbs and Localities). Noble Park mirrors and in places exceeds the remarkable diversity of its LGA. 65.8% of residents were born overseas (Australia-born: 34.2%), above even the LGA's already high overseas-born share of 63.4%. 78.8% have both parents born overseas. English is the only language spoken at home in 29.2% of households. Vietnamese ancestry is reported by 12.8% of residents and Khmer (Cambodian) ancestry by 9.1% — the LGA's Southeast Asian migration history is concentrated and visible at the suburb level. Buddhism is practised by 18.3% and Islam by 11.1%. Median weekly personal income: $628 (Victoria: $803), 22% below the Victorian median, consistent with the LGA-wide income profile. Where Noble Park-specific Census figures are not cited here, the Greater Dandenong LGA context (LGA22670, 158,208 people) provides the appropriate structural framing for income, employment, and qualification patterns.

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    Shepparton, VIC

    Population 32,067 · Median income $1,285/wk · SEIFA 897

    Shepparton is a city in the Goulburn Valley of northern Victoria, set on the Goulburn River about 181 kilometres north of Melbourne. It lies on the country of the Yorta Yorta people. The town took its name from Sherbourne Sheppard, who ran a local sheep station from the 1840s, and grew quickly once the railway arrived in 1880. Sitting at the heart of one of Australia's largest irrigation districts, Shepparton is the hub of the Goulburn Valley food bowl, with orchards, dairying and the SPC fruit cannery long central to its economy. The city is also known for its colourful Moooving Art cows dotted around the streets and for the Shepparton Art Museum, home to a major collection of Australian ceramics.

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    Clyde North, VIC

    Population 31,681 · Median income $2,163/wk · SEIFA 1040

    Clyde North is a suburb in Melbourne's outer south-east, within the City of Casey, approximately 53 kilometres from the CBD. Population: 31,681 at the 2021 Census (ABS 2021 Census QuickStats, SAL20582, Suburbs and Localities). In the 2016 Census the same area recorded approximately 8,156 residents (ABS 2016 Census QuickStats, SSC20579) — growth of 23,525 people in five years, a 288% increase, making it one of Australia's fastest-growing suburbs by absolute gain over that period. The profile this growth produced is young, international, and family-oriented: median age 30 (national: 38); 60.6% of adults married (national: 46.5%); 65.1% of households owned with mortgage (Victoria: 36.1%). Only 46.0% of residents were born in Australia. India-born: 18.2% (Victoria: 4.0%); Sri Lanka-born: 7.9% (Victoria: 1.0%). Both parents born overseas: 70.6% (national: 36.7%). Punjabi is spoken at home in 11.5% of households (Victoria: 1.6%) — among the highest concentrations of any of Melbourne's fringe growth suburbs, ahead of Tarneit (7.7%). Hinduism is reported by 12.2% (Victoria: 3.3%) and Sikhism by 10.2% (Victoria: 1.4%). Median weekly household income: $2,163 (Victoria: $1,759). Labour force participation: 73.7% (Victoria: 62.4%). 72.4% of dwellings have four or more bedrooms (Victoria: 32.6%); 97.2% are separate houses. Public transport use to work: 3.3% — the physical infrastructure of a settled suburb is still catching up to the population that has already arrived.

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    Warrnambool, VIC

    Population 31,308 · Median income $1,385/wk · SEIFA 958

    Warrnambool is a regional city on Victoria's south-west coast, about 265 kilometres from Melbourne, where the Great Ocean Road meets the wide sweep of Lady Bay. It lies on the country of the Dhauwurd Wurrung, or Gunditjmara, people, and takes its name from nearby Mount Warrnambool, a scoria-cone volcano to the north-east. British settlers arrived from the late 1830s and the township was surveyed in 1845. Each winter, southern right whales come close inshore to calve off Logans Beach, watched from a purpose-built viewing platform — the town's signature wildlife event. Its maritime past is told at Flagstaff Hill, a re-created nineteenth-century port village above the harbour.

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    Doncaster East, VIC

    Population 30,926 · Median income $1,792/wk · SEIFA 1064

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    Narre Warren South, VIC

    Population 30,909 · Median income $2,158/wk · SEIFA 993

    Narre Warren South is a large outer-suburban area in Melbourne's south-eastern growth corridor, within the City of Casey, about 43 kilometres south-east of the CBD. Population: 30,909 at the 2021 Census (ABS 2021 Census QuickStats, SAL21896, Suburbs and Localities). Note: an earlier sprint flagged this as SA2-only; that is incorrect — SAL21896 is confirmed as a Suburbs and Localities geography. The LGA note: Narre Warren South is within the City of Casey; the suburb population of 30,909 (SAL21896) is distinct from the much larger City of Casey LGA. The suburb is bordered by Narre Warren to the north, Berwick to the east and Cranbourne North to the south. It is thoroughly car-dependent: 93% separate houses, average 2.4 motor vehicles per household, and just 3.1% of commutes by public transport. Demographics are striking: 7.7% of residents were born in Afghanistan (Victorian average: 0.4%), with Afghan, Hazara and Indian ancestries in the top five. About 44.2% of households use a language other than English at home (Victoria: 30.2%), and 6.0% speak Hazaraghi. Median age is 34 (Victoria: 38). Household income of $2,158 per week sits above Victorian ($1,759) and national ($1,746) medians. Ownership with mortgage is high at 57.4%; four-or-more bedroom homes account for 65.6% of the stock. The workforce skews toward trades, labour and services, with professionals at 16.0% well below Victoria's 25.0%.

Rankings are editorial, based on the public data shown on each suburb page. See our methodology.