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Trinity Beach property prices surge past Cairns rivals

Waterfront appeal and tourism recovery drive the northern suburb to become the region's strongest investment performer.

By Cairns Property Desk · 29 June 2026 at 8:05 am · 2 min read

2 min read· 401 words

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Trinity Beach property prices surge past Cairns rivals
Photo: Photo by Dan Voican on Pexels

Trinity Beach is quietly rewriting the narrative of Cairns property, with median values climbing past $520,000 and showing no signs of stalling as interstate buyers and local upgraders chase beachfront lifestyle against a backdrop of regional economic recovery.

The Northern Beaches pocket, anchored by the suburb's 1.2-kilometre white-sand beach and patrolled swimming enclosure, has consistently outpaced broader regional trends. Properties fronting Trinity Parade or within 400 metres of the shoreline have appreciated 8–12 per cent over the past 18 months, defying the caution that has gripped other Queensland markets as investors reckon with the state's 14,000-home undersupply and tax pressures.

"We're seeing two distinct buyer cohorts," says one local agent familiar with the precinct. "Empty-nesters from the south trading down from million-dollar homes, and young families who've done the sums on lifestyle versus mortgage stress. The beach genuinely matters to people post-pandemic."

The appeal is tangible. Trinity Beach Primary School feeds into Cairns State High School; the shopping strip on Aplin Street hosts cafes, medical services and a fresh produce market each Saturday. More importantly, the Cairns Wildlife Dome and Easy Street parkland provide anchors for foot traffic and tourism spend—a critical factor as Cairns Tourism reopens international flight routes through Singapore and Tokyo.

Entry-level three-bedroom homes on quieter streets like Pease and Belvedere now sit around $480,000–$520,000, versus $410,000–$450,000 for comparable stock in Smithfield, the adjacent suburb competing for the same demographic. Waterfront blocks or dual-occupancy-approved land commands premiums exceeding $650,000.

The timing aligns with broader sentiment shifts. As Drew Barrymore and other high-net-worth individuals reassess their property portfolios, retirement and sea-change narratives are reshaping Australian real estate. Trinity Beach benefits from this tilt toward regional coastal living without the Sydney-Melbourne price tags—or the isolation of far-flung markets.

Agents note inventory remains tight, with fewer than 20 residential sales listed at any given time. This scarcity is likely to sustain upward pressure through 2026–2027, particularly if Chinese investment—which has begun returning to Cairns after years of regulatory headwinds—targets premium addresses in the Northern Beaches precinct.

For investors and owner-occupiers, Trinity Beach represents a rare convergence: a sub-$520,000 median in a tourism-anchored market, with demographic tailwinds and limited supply. Whether that momentum holds depends on interest rates and interstate migration flows—but the fundamentals remain firmer here than elsewhere in regional Queensland.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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Published by The Daily Cairns

This article was produced by the The Daily Cairns editorial desk and covers property in Cairns. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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