Rapid Creek vs Jingili.
Comparing two suburbs with median house prices of $800,000 and $649,000. Jingili edges out on more headline metrics in this comparison.
Jingili (median $649,000) is roughly 23% cheaper to buy into than Rapid Creek ($800,000).
Jingili scores higher on walkability (4/100 vs 10/100 ), useful if you're optimising for a car-light household. Jingili skews owner-occupied (74%), Rapid Creek runs more rental-dense (42% owner).
For buyers
Jingili is the lower entry point at $649,000 median, 23% below the other suburb. For first home buyers, that translates to a smaller deposit and lower stamp duty bill.
For investors
Jingili offers the higher gross rental yield (2.76% vs 2.24%), favouring cash-flow investors.
For families
Jingili has a heavier family-household mix (78% vs 61%), which typically signals stronger demand for family-amenable infrastructure (parks, schools, supermarkets).
Common questions
Is Rapid Creek or Jingili cheaper to buy in?
Jingili has the lower median house price at $649,000, roughly 23% below Rapid Creek ($800,000). The gap on units is usually similar but worth checking on the full suburb profiles.
Which is more walkable, Rapid Creek or Jingili?
Jingili scores 10/100 on walkability vs 4/100. Above 70 is considered very walkable (most errands on foot), 50-69 is walkable for some errands, below 50 typically requires a car for daily life.
Which suburb has higher rental yield, Rapid Creek or Jingili?
Gross rental yield on houses is 2.76% in Jingili vs 2.24% in Rapid Creek. Gross yield equals annual rent divided by purchase price. Net yield (after strata, rates, insurance, agent fees and maintenance) typically runs 1.5-2 percentage points lower.
The numbers behind the take
Price & Market
Rental
Lifestyle & Demographics
Risk & Hazard
Schools
Climate
Green dot = better on that metric (lower price, higher growth, higher walkability, lower risk).
Compare Rapid Creek against another suburb