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Kedron 4031

Inner-northern β€” 8km from CBD Β· Brisbane City Council (Marchant Ward) Β· 3.0 kmΒ² Β· Walk Score 62/100

⚑ Beverley's read

Kedron textbook inner-north Brisbane β€” leafy, family-focused, and sitting just 8km from the CBD with a median house price that’s jumped 90% in five years. The big draw here is Kedron State High School, consistently ranked among Queensland’s top public schools, which has parents falling over themselves to get into the catchment. You’ve got Westfield Chermside three minutes up the road (Queensland’s biggest shopping centre), the Kedron Brook bikeway for a car-free commute, and a proper village feel along Kedron Park Road with cafes and the Kedron-Wavell RSL. It’s the kind of suburb where knockdown-rebuilds are taking over the old post-war homes, pushing values up fast.

Market Pulse

$1,450,000
Median house price
+18%
YoY growth
$670/week
Median rent
2.4%
Rental yield
22–30 avg
Days on market

Living in Kedron

Living in Kedron: From Pony Track Gangsters to Brisbane's Best School Catchment

There's a street in Kedron where you can stand and see three different eras at once. A 1920s Queenslander with a wraparound verandah, a 1950s brick home built solid for a public servant's family, and a brand-new duplex where someone's grandmother's house used to be. That visual timeline is Kedron in a nutshell β€” a suburb that's been reinvented every generation for 170 years, each time by a different kind of people.
Kedron Brook β€” the creek that gave the suburb its biblical name
Present Day

Kedron Brook β€” named after the Biblical Kidron Valley where Jesus crossed before his arrest. German Moravian missionaries gave it the name when they arrived in 1838, establishing the first free European settlement in what would become Queensland. Today, the brook and its bikeway are the suburb's defining natural amenity.

A Creek Named for a King

It starts with the water. Kedron Brook β€” the name comes from the Kidron Valley in the Bible, where King David crossed during Absalom's rebellion and where Jesus walked on the night of his betrayal. The German Moravian missionaries who arrived in 1838 to establish the Zion's Hill mission (modern-day Nundah) looked at the creek running through their 650-acre grant and gave it a name freighted with meaning. They were building a new Jerusalem in the southern bush, and this was their sacred stream.

The mission didn't last β€” it closed in 1846 β€” but the name stuck. And it's the reason Kedron exists at all: because German Lutherans with a biblical vision chose this waterway as their home.

Judge Lutwyche's Estate (1859–1880)

In 1856, farm lots along Kedron Brook were surveyed. Two of them β€” near where Gympie Road now runs β€” were purchased in 1859 by Judge Alfred Lutwyche, a man whose name still appears on maps across Brisbane's north side. He called his estate Kedron Lodge. His land today is the site of Kedron State High School and the emergency services complex β€” an extraordinary piece of continuity from colonial judge to public education.

The Edinburgh Castle Hotel opened on Gympie Road around 1868, serving travellers on the gold rush route north. Kedron Brook was finally bridged in the 1870s β€” before that, crossings relied on a ford. The Kedron Park Hotel, built in 1880, was the real catalyst. Its proprietor started horse races, polo matches, and sports days on the hotel grounds, drawing crowds from across the district.

Gympie Road in the 1870s β€” the gold rush route through Kedron
Historical β€” c. 1870s

Gympie Road was the main artery north, carrying Cobb & Co coaches and gold rush traffic through what would become Kedron. The Edinburgh Castle Hotel (c.1868) and Kedron Park Hotel (1880) sprang up to serve this traffic, turning a quiet farming district into a destination.

The Gangster Era β€” John Wren's Pony Track (1911–1931)

This is where Kedron's story takes a turn you don't expect from a school catchment suburb.

In 1911, interests involving John Wren β€” the notorious Melbourne gambling identity immortalised in Frank Hardy's novel Power Without Glory β€” acquired Kedron Park as an unregistered pony racing track. Wren built a gambling empire catering to the working class, and Kedron Park was his northern outpost.

But it wasn't just racing. The park became a full-blown entertainment precinct: an outdoor cinema, picnic gardens, a merry-go-round. Families would catch the tram from the city β€” the Lutwyche Road line had been extended to Kedron Brook in 1913 β€” and spend the day watching ponies, films, and each other. It was Brisbane's first theme park, hidden inside a suburban paddock.

"Kedron Park wasn't just a pony track β€” it was Brisbane's first entertainment precinct. Outdoor cinema, picnic gardens, a merry-go-round, and gambling for the working class. Families caught the tram from the city and spent the whole day there. It was Disneyland before Disneyland, run by gangsters." β€” Kedron local history

Wren's name survives in Mercer Park next to Kedron Brook, where an oval commemorates his legacy. The pony racing ended in 1931, a casualty of the Depression and changing laws. Harness racing and dog racing limped on until 1956. When the last race was run, Kedron Park was subdivided into the homes that now form the suburb's central residential fabric.

Kedron Park pony racing track and entertainment precinct, 1910s-1920s
Historical β€” 1920s

Kedron Park β€” an illegal pony racing track and entertainment precinct run by associates of notorious Melbourne gambling figure John Wren. Outdoor cinema, merry-go-round, picnic gardens, and gambling for the working class. For two decades, this was Brisbane's most unlikely leisure destination: an underworld operation that was also a perfectly respectable place to take the kids on Saturday afternoon.

The Tramline Suburb (1913–1950s)

The tramline was Kedron's infrastructure catalyst, just as it was for Stafford. When the Lutwyche Road line reached Kedron Brook in 1913, land values shifted overnight. The Kedron Park Tramway Estate (1915) offered 120 "elevated sites" and the Glen Kedron Estate (1917) carved up land east of Leckie Road. When the service was extended to the cemetery in 1925, all of Kedron was suddenly subdividable.

The amenities followed fast: a Methodist church (1925), primary school (1926), School of Arts at Gympie and Broughton Roads (1928), Catholic primary school (1930), and the bowling club (1934–2003). The Catholic Church secured Delamore House in Turner Road β€” a historic estate that became a convent for the Missionary Sisters of St Francis.

Kedron Shire β€” the local government area named after the creek β€” was absorbed into Greater Brisbane in 1925. By then, the district had its own identity, separate from both Nundah to the east and Chermside to the north.

The School That Defines a Suburb (1957–Today)

Kedron's population peaked in the 1950s. The primary school had 1,800 pupils. The Catholic Church opened girls' and boys' secondary schools between 1956–59. And in 1957, Kedron State High School opened its doors β€” on the very land Judge Lutwyche had called Kedron Lodge a century earlier.

Today, Kedron State High School is one of Brisbane's top-performing public schools. Its catchment zone is arguably the single most valuable asset in the suburb's property market. Families pay a significant premium β€” often 15–20% above comparable homes outside the zone β€” for the right to send their children there.

Kedron State High School β€” established 1957 on Judge Lutwyche's original estate
Present Day

Kedron State High School β€” one of Brisbane's most sought-after public schools. The school sits on land originally purchased by Judge Alfred Lutwyche in 1859, a continuity of educational purpose that stretches back nearly 170 years. The catchment zone is the defining factor in Kedron's property market.

Photo: Q8682 / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Kedron Today β€” The School Catchment Premium

Kedron in 2026 is a suburb of about 8,600 people, eight kilometres from the CBD. Its housing stock is a mixture of interwar and post-war homes β€” Queenslanders, brick veneers, and a growing number of townhouses and low-rise apartments. Flats now make up about 25% of dwellings, more than double the national average.

The Gympie Road shopping strip serves local needs β€” bakery, medical centre, pubs, cafes β€” while Chermside's retail behemoth is literally five minutes north. The Kedron Brook bikeway connects directly to the CBD for cyclists. The Kedron Wavell RSL at the southern end of 7th Brigade Park is undergoing major upgrades, adding new dining and function spaces.

But the real story is the catchment premium. Kedron homes within the high school zone command prices that would be hard to justify on amenity alone. It's the same dynamic that drives up prices in Indooroopilly, Brisbane State High's catchment, and Mansfield β€” but Kedron's advantage is its compact size. The catchment is small, tightly defined, and fiercely desired.

The Knockdown-Rebuild Wave

Like its neighbour Stafford, Kedron is experiencing a knockdown-rebuild wave. The post-war homes on generous blocks are steadily being replaced β€” not with housing commission austerity copies, but with premium residences designed for families who could live anywhere but choose Kedron for the school zone.

This dynamic creates interesting tension. The suburb that was once a working-class entertainment district β€” gangster pony tracks and picnic gardens β€” is now one of Brisbane's most desirable school-catchment suburbs. The demographic shift from factory workers and public servants to professionals and tradie-entrepreneurs is visible in every renovated kitchen and new-build facade.

Kedron's knockdown-rebuild wave β€” modern homes replacing post-war originals
Present Day

Like its neighbour Stafford, Kedron is seeing a wave of knockdown-rebuild construction as families compete for homes within the high school catchment. The generous blocks that once housed public servants and factory workers are becoming premium residences for a new generation.

What's Next for Kedron?

Kedron's future is written in its school catchment map. As long as Kedron State High School maintains its reputation, demand for homes within the zone will only intensify. The Carseldine Urban Village and Chermside Metro developments to the north will further boost the entire corridor's profile.

The Kedron Wavell RSL precinct upgrades are adding community amenity that benefits the whole suburb. With limited land left to subdivide, and the infill pipeline constrained by the Brisbane City Council's neighbourhood plan, Kedron's character is likely to remain predominantly low-rise β€” a suburb of Queenslanders and brick homes, slowly upgraded, generation by generation.

Who Should Buy Here?

Kedron is for families who prioritise education above almost everything else. The school catchment premium is real, and it's reinforced every year when Year 12 results are published. If you're planning for children β€” or your children are approaching high school age β€” Kedron is one of the smartest bets on Brisbane's north side.

It's also for buyers who appreciate texture and continuity β€” who'd rather live in a suburb with a bizarre, wonderful history (biblical creek, gangster pony track, judge's estate, school zone) than in a place built yesterday with no memory at all.

Stand on the right street in Kedron and you can see 170 years in a single glance. The creek the missionaries named. The land the judge bought. The school the families chase. And a pony track where gangsters once ran the show.

Liveability

Living here

Liveability Score

9/10
Schools10/10
Transport5/10
Amenities8/10
Growth10/10
Family Fit10/10

Schools & Education

Kedron State SchoolPrimary (P–6) Β· Public
Heritage school, solid NAPLAN results, strong community
Kedron State High SchoolSecondary (7–12) Β· Public
One of Brisbane's top-performing public schools β€” strong ATAR results, excellent reputation
Padua CollegeSecondary (5–12) Β· Catholic Β· ~$8,000/yr
Well-established boys' college with strong NAPLAN performance
πŸš— Nearby schools
St Margaret's Anglican Girls School Β· P–12 Β· Private
Elite girls' school, top NAPLAN rankings Β· ~$18k/yr
Ascot Β· ~12 min drive
St Rita's College Β· Secondary (5–12) Β· Catholic
Top-performing Catholic girls' college Β· ~$9k/yr
Clayfield Β· ~8 min drive
Our Lady of the Angels Β· Primary (P–6) Β· Catholic
Well-regarded Catholic primary in the heart of Kedron
Kedron Β· ~3 min drive

Walkability & Lifestyle

62/ 100 Β· Somewhat Walkable
  • 8 parks covering 10% of area
  • 1 per 712
  • Bike Score: High β€” Kedron Brook bikeway provides direct cycle route to CBD
  • Westfield Chermside β€” 3 min drive (QLD's largest centre)
  • Kedron Village β€” cafes, dining, medical centre
  • Kedron Park Road retail strip
  • Stafford City Shopping Centre β€” 6 min drive

Transport

No train station within the suburb β€” bus services provide public transport connections.

  • ~15 min by car / ~30 min by bus
  • ~15 min via Gympie Rd
  • Bus routes: 325, 326, 333, 335, 337, 340, 350, 353, 370
  • Brisbane City, Chermside, Toombul, Brookside, Aspley

People & Demographics

Kedron has a median age of 35 with 62%. Household income averages $2,020/week (Top third of QLD suburbs). Population +8.2% since 2016.

5,695
Population
35
Median age
$2,020/week
Median household income
55%
Owner occupied
1,898/kmΒ²
Pop. density
2.5 people
Avg household size
Professionals
Top occupation
Slightly more advantaged than ~55% of Australian suburbs
Queensland β€” 6th decile
Diversity Index
28% not Anglo-Australian
Top Ancestries
English (30%) Β· Australian (25%) Β· Irish (8%)

Best Fit

Who Kedron suits

Based on property data, demographics, and lifestyle factors, Kedron appeals to these buyer profiles.

πŸ‘¨β€πŸ‘©β€πŸ‘§β€πŸ‘¦
Families
Kedron offers 3 schools within the suburb and 8 parks, with a median age suited to family life.
πŸ“ˆ
Investors
2.4% yield with a vacancy rate of <1%. ~13.7% annual capital growth. Low vacancy, high competition for properties in Kedron SHS catchment
🏠
First Home Buyers
Median house price $1,450,000 β€” may stretch budgets, but consider units for a more accessible entry point.
πŸ”‘
Downsizers
Unit median $620,000 with Westfield Chermside β€” 3 min drive (QLD's largest centre), Kedron Village β€” cafes, dining, medical centre, Kedron Park Road retail strip nearby. ~15 min by car / ~30 min by bus Β· Units yield 4.6% Β· Walkable lifestyle.

Property Data

Property β€” Houses

$1,450,000
Median price
+18%
YoY growth
+4.5%
Quarterly growth
+90%
5-year growth
~13.7%
Annual capital growth
55 in past 12 months
Sales volume (12mo)
22–30 avg
Days on market
55%
Owner-occupied

Property β€” Units

$620,000
Median price
+12.5%
YoY growth
+3.5%
Quarterly growth
20 in past 12 months
Sales volume (12mo)
18–25 avg
Days on market

Rental Market

🏠 House rental

$670/week
Median rent
2.4%
Gross yield
+7.5%
Rent growth (YoY)
+1.8%
Rent growth (QoQ)

🏒 Unit rental

$520/week
Median rent
4.6%
Gross yield
+7.5%
Rent growth (YoY)
Demand indicators
Vacancy rate: <1%
Strong β€” top school catchment + Chermside proximity + excellent transport = sustained tenant demand

Risk & Due Diligence

What to know before buying

Safety & Crime Intelligence

Crime score: 20/100 severity rank (0 = no crime) β€” significantly safer than QLD & national benchmarks across most categories.

35% lower than QLD average
Break-ins vs QLD avg
22% lower than national average
Break-ins vs national
30% lower than QLD average
Vehicle theft vs QLD
25% lower than QLD average
Violent crime vs QLD
Trend (2020–2024, all crimes declining):
Break-ins βˆ’5% (2020–24) Β· Vehicle theft βˆ’14% (2020–24) Β· Violent βˆ’4.5% (2020–24)
Chance of violent crime: 1 in 195 (vs QLD 1 in 123, AU 1 in 89)

Flood & Environmental Risk

Low overall β€” minor overland flow near Kedron Brook. Low (urban suburb, fully developed). Always verify your specific property:

  • Check Brisbane City Council Flood Awareness Map
  • Limited flood overlay near Kedron Brook corridor
  • Insurance: check with provider β€” flood premiums vary by specific lot

Development & Infrastructure Pipeline

Kedron has active development projects shaping the suburb's future.

Kedron Wavell RSL Precinct
Major facility upgrades including new dining, function spaces and community areas
Knockdown-Rebuild Wave
High volume of post-war homes being replaced with premium residences, significant value uplift across the suburb
Infrastructure
  • Kedron State High School β€” one of Brisbane's top public schools
  • Kedron Brook bikeway β€” direct 6km cycle path to CBD
  • Westfield Chermside β€” QLD's largest shopping centre
  • Gympie Road arterial β€” direct CBD connection
Population projection: Projected ~7,000–9,000 by 2036 (moderate infill)

Top Sales

Updated: May 2026 Β· Public property records + market estimates

Recent recorded sales in Kedron across the last 3 months.

DatePropertyPrice
May 2026 β€” 1 sale
May 20264br, 22 Kedron Park Rd$2,050,000
Apr 2026 β€” 2 sales
Apr 20265br, 45 Royal St$1,850,000
Apr 20264br, 12 Bushnell St$1,720,000
Mar 2026 β€” 2 sales
Mar 20264br, 38 Windsor Rd$1,580,000
Mar 20263br Queenslander, 22 Kidston St$1,350,000
Feb 2026 β€” 1 sale
Feb 20262br unit, 6/15 Gympie Rd$680,000
Data sourced from public property recordsView all sold listings β†—

Investor Summary

~13.7%
Annual capital growth
2.4%
House rental yield
Units: 4.6%
<1%
Vacancy rate
+7.5%
Rent growth (YoY)
  • Investor profile: Top school catchment + proximity to Chermside = strong capital growth
  • Demand indicator: Low vacancy, high competition for properties in Kedron SHS catchment
  • Gentrification risk: High β€” knockdown-rebuild wave well underway, significant upside remaining
  • Subdivision potential: Limited β€” mostly standard residential blocks, but larger lots offer dual-living potential

What Changed This Week

No recent articles published for Kedron this week. Check back for the latest local updates.

Beverley's real-world take

Living in Kedron: From Pony Track Gangsters to Brisbane's Best School Catchment

Eight kilometres north of the CBD, Kedron has a story you wouldn't guess from its quiet tree-lined streets. German missionaries named its creek after a biblical river. A notorious Melbourne gangster ran an illegal pony track here. And today, it's home to one of Queensland's top public schools β€” draw

Read the full guide β†—
Data sources: ABS Census 2021 Β· QPS Crime Statistics Β· MySchool / ACARA NAPLAN Β· Council flood mapping Β· WalkScore.com Β· QLD Government population projections Β· TransLink GTFS. Property data is indicative β€” verify with current sales. This report is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice.

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