Suburb Intelligence
Sandgate 4017
Coastal bayside β 18km from CBD Β· Brisbane City Council (Deagon Ward) Β· 3.1 kmΒ² Β· Walk Score 65/100
β‘ Beverley's read
Sandgate brisbaneβs original seaside escape β a bayside village thatβs been doing the weekend-getaway thing since the 1850s, well before the Gold Coast was even on the map. Perched 18km north of the CBD on Moreton Bay, itβs got that classic Queensland coastal charm: a historic pier, a proper foreshore with Moora Park, and a main street of cafes and fish-and-chip shops that could be straight out of a postcard. The Shorncliffe train line drops you right in the village, and at a walk score of 65, most of the daily stuff is within strolling distance. House prices have climbed 72% in five years as people realise they can get genuine bayside living without the hour-long commute.
Market Pulse
Living in Sandgate
Living in Sandgate: Brisbane's Original Seaside Escape
Bathers at Moora Park, Sandgate, December 1937 β captured by the Queensland State Archives. The families picnicking and swimming on this stretch of foreshore look remarkably like the ones you'd see there today. For nearly a century, Sandgate has been Brisbane's most consistent seaside destination β unchanged in spirit, even as the city around it transformed.
The Seaside Resort That Started It All (1850sβ1880s)
Sandgate was Brisbane's first coastal resort. In the 1850s, before Surfers Paradise was a swamp, before the railway even existed, well-heeled Brisbanites would make the journey north to Moreton Bay for a seaside holiday. The journey was long and the accommodation was basic, but the bay β shallow, warm, protected β was worth the trouble.
The Sandgate Pier became the centrepiece of the resort β a heritage-listed structure jutting into Bramble Bay, serving fishermen, strollers, and romantics for generations. The Shorncliffe railway line opened in 1882, transforming Sandgate from a destination for the well-off into a day-trip destination for everyone. Hotels sprang up along the foreshore. The Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron established itself. Sandgate Baths β a tidal swimming enclosure β gave families a safe place to swim regardless of the tide.
For a century, this was the seaside destination for Brisbane's working and middle classes. School holidays meant Sandgate. Weekend excursions meant Sandgate. First dates meant the Sandgate Pier at sunset. The Sandgate Town Hall, built in 1913, anchored the civic precinct on Rainbow Street β the same street where you'll find cafes and boutique shops today.
The Sandgate Town Hall, built in 1913, still stands as the civic heart of Rainbow Street. It's a reminder that Sandgate was a proper town β not just a beachside hamlet β with its own council chambers, post office, and civic pride. Today the building is part of the village fabric that makes Sandgate one of Brisbane's most distinctive suburbs.
The Village That Refused to Sell Out (1960sβPresent)
While the Gold Coast became a wall of high-rises and the Sunshine Coast sprawled north, Sandgate stayed small. Not by accident β by character. The heritage shopfronts on Rainbow Street, the Norfolk pines along the foreshore, the modest Queenslanders on tree-lined streets β this is a suburb that actively resisted the kind of development that would have changed its identity.
The Sandgate Town Centre Revitalisation has enhanced what was already there: streetscape upgrades, better pedestrian connections, a dining precinct that makes the most of the bay views. The Sandgate Foreshore Upgrades β coastal pathway improvements, parkland and dining precinct enhancements β have improved amenity without over-commercialising the waterfront. The post office building, the town hall, the pier β they're all still here, still in use, still part of daily life.
Sandgate Today β $1.2M for Bayside
Sandgate in 2026 is home to about 5,000 people, 18km from the CBD. The median house price is $1.2M β up 72% in five years. A Queenslander on Flinders Parade recently sold for $1.65M. A cottage on Rainbow Street went for $1.35M.
The train station drops you right in the village β a 30-minute commute to the CBD. The walk score of 65 means most daily errands are on foot. Sandgate State School (est. 1865) is one of Brisbane's oldest primary schools. Sandgate District State High School serves the bayside community. St Patrick's College at nearby Shorncliffe offers Catholic secondary with boarding options.
Crime is remarkably low: break-ins are 52% below the Queensland average, violent crime 40% below, and both have been trending down for years. The 1.1% vacancy rate confirms what locals already know β people want to be here.
Who Should Buy Here?
Sandgate is for people who want bayside living without the Gold Coast price tag or the hour-long commute. It's for the empty-nester selling the family home in the suburbs for a cottage by the bay β the median age of 42 reflects this. It's for the professional who walks to the station, reads on the train, and is in the CBD in 30 minutes. It's for the family who wants their kids to grow up with the pier, the foreshore, and the Norfolk pines β the same backdrop that Brisbanites have been enjoying since the 1850s.
And it's for anyone who believes that some things β a heritage pier, a tidal bath, a town hall from 1913, a fish-and-chip shop on the esplanade β are worth preserving, even when the developers come calling.
Look at the 1937 photograph of Moora Park. Then look at it today. The families are different. The clothes have changed. But the bay is the same. And that's the point.
Liveability
Living here
Liveability Score
9/10Schools & Education
Walkability & Lifestyle
- 10 parks covering 15% of area
- 1 per 504
- Bike Score: Moderate β flat bayside terrain, foreshore shared path
- Sandgate Town Centre β cafes, dining, specialty retail, IGA
- Sandgate Village β boutique shopping along Rainbow Street
- Taigum Square β 5 min drive
- Westfield Chermside β 12 min drive
Transport
Train station: Sandgate. Peak frequency Every 15β30 min peak.
- ~30 min by train
- ~25 min via Sandgate Rd
- Bus routes: 310, 320, 690, 691
- Brisbane City, Redcliffe, Chermside, Toombul
People & Demographics
Sandgate has a median age of 42 with 55%. Household income averages $1,780/week (Mid-range for Brisbane bayside suburbs). Population +6.8% since 2016.
Best Fit
Who Sandgate suits
Based on property data, demographics, and lifestyle factors, Sandgate appeals to these buyer profiles.
Property Data
Property β Houses
Property β Units
Rental Market
π House rental
π’ Unit rental
Risk & Due Diligence
What to know before buying
Safety & Crime Intelligence
Crime score: 12/100 severity rank (0 = no crime) β significantly safer than QLD & national benchmarks across most categories.
Break-ins β6.5% (2020β24) Β· Vehicle theft β18% (2020β24) Β· Violent β5.5% (2020β24)
Chance of violent crime: 1 in 250 (vs QLD 1 in 123, AU 1 in 89)
Flood & Environmental Risk
Moderate β coastal suburb with storm surge and tidal flooding risk in low-lying areas. Low (urban bayside suburb). Always verify your specific property:
- Check Brisbane City Council Flood Awareness Map
- Coastal flood planning overlay applies to foreshore areas
- Insurance: check with provider β flood premiums vary by specific lot
Development & Infrastructure Pipeline
Sandgate has active development projects shaping the suburb's future.
- Sandgate Station β Shorncliffe line (30 min to CBD)
- Sandgate Foreshore β waterfront dining and parkland
- Sandgate Pier β heritage-listed fishing and leisure pier
- Bramble Bay β Moreton Bay waterfront
Top Sales
Updated: May 2026 Β· Public property records + market estimatesRecent recorded sales in Sandgate across the last 3 months.
Investor Summary
- Investor profile: Bayside lifestyle suburb with strong capital growth and lifestyle appeal
- Demand indicator: Low vacancy, high demand for well-positioned properties near the foreshore
- Gentrification risk: High β ongoing renewal of the village and foreshore precinct
- Subdivision potential: Limited β small blocks in established bayside suburb
What Changed This Week
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Living in Sandgate: Brisbane's Original Seaside Escape
Long before the Gold Coast was a strip of high-rises, before the Sunshine Coast was a weekend destination, there was Sandgate. A pier. A foreshore. A train line that carried Brisbanites to the bay for a day of swimming, fish and chips, and salt air. The Sandgate Town Hall, built in 1913, still stand
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