Logan sits in an interesting position in the SEQ market. For years it was undervalued relative to its proximity to Brisbane — inner-ring Brisbane is 20–25 km north. That discount is closing. Strong rental yields, improving infrastructure, and a growing population are making Logan a serious consideration for investors who've been priced out of inner-ring positions.
Why Logan Has Been Undervalued
Logan has carried a perception problem. The "problem suburb" narrative suppressed valuations relative to fundamentals for longer than the data justified. That narrative is now running up against a different story: an LGA spanning a large and diverse area, within which are many well-performing, family-oriented suburbs with solid amenity and consistently low vacancy rates.
- Discount to Brisbane median: typically 35–50% — but rental yields often 2–3x higher
- Vacancy: sub-2% in most established suburbs; rental demand is structural, not speculative
- Entry point: accessible for investors who've been priced out of inner Brisbane without compromising on yield
The Fundamentals Are Changing
The investment case for Logan isn't just about yield. The capital growth story is starting to follow as underlying conditions shift:
- Council infrastructure: Logan City Council has invested significantly in amenity, road network upgrades, and town centre transformations across the LGA
- Population: Logan is one of Queensland's fastest-growing LGAs; net new households are adding demand pressure to existing stock
- Employment: proximity to major industrial precincts (Yatala, Meadowbrook), distribution hubs, and healthcare employment at Logan Hospital underpins tenant demand
- New housing supply: limited new infill stock in established suburbs is maintaining price floors
Best-Performing Logan Suburbs
The LGA is large. Suburb selection matters considerably. These are the areas generating consistent investor interest:
- Woodridge and Kingston: strong yield profile, high tenant demand, proximity to Logan Central employment corridor
- Logan Central: council investment is improving amenity; value still discounted relative to what's coming
- Springwood: sits at the upper end of the Logan market; stronger capital growth profile, compressed yield relative to outer suburbs
- Loganholme and Marsden: family-oriented, lower vacancy, good school catchments — reduces tenant churn
- Berrinba: newer stock, good connectivity, appeals to the working population base of the industrial precinct corridor
The general rule: outer suburbs and those closer to the industrial corridor offer the strongest yields. Suburbs closer to the M1 and Springwood offer a more balanced yield/growth profile.
What to Watch For
No corridor is without risk. Logan-specific considerations:
- Insurance: SEQ flood and hail exposure means insurance costs are meaningful. Model this in your yield calculation, not as an afterthought.
- Tenant demand quality: some pockets of the LGA have higher tenant turnover rates than others. Local property management intelligence is important.
- Strata issues in unit blocks: older unit stock in some suburbs has deferred maintenance. Body corporate levies and special levies can erode yield significantly.
- Council rates: Logan City Council rates are among the highest per capita in Queensland — factor this into your holding cost model.
Eleva in Logan
Eleva Property is active in the Logan corridor. We work with property owners who want to unlock value from their Logan properties — whether through a joint venture renovation, a direct acquisition, or a property reset ahead of sale. If you own a Logan property and want to understand what the options look like, see what we offer in Logan or start a conversation directly.