๐Ÿก Brisbane North Q3 โ€” median house prices up 4.2% YoY๐Ÿ“Š Brisbane dwelling values up 1.8% over the past quarterโœจ Free property appraisal โ€” discover your home's value today
SuburbsMarket reportsBuyer guidesSelling guidesNewsAsk Beverley
โ† Back to Suburbs

Suburb Intelligence

Clontarf 4019

Redcliffe Peninsula ยท City of Moreton Bay ยท 4.6 kmยฒ ยท Walk Score 30/100

โšก Beverley's read

Clontarf on the western side of the Redcliffe Peninsula, looking across the Hays Inlet towards Brisbane ? a water-adjacent suburb that gives you the peninsula lifestyle without the premium of a direct ocean view. Thirty-three kilometres north of the city via the Redcliffe Peninsula line (Kippa-Ring station is closest), it's a mix of waterfront homes, canalside blocks, and older fibro-and-tile holiday houses that are steadily getting renovated. The Clontarf foreshore walking path is one of the peninsula's best-kept secrets.

Market Pulse

$780,000
Median house price
+12%
YoY growth
$530/week
Median rent
3.5%
Rental yield
28โ€“35 avg
Days on market

Living in Clontarf

Living in Clontarf: Where the First Europeans Landed

Clontarf's history reaches back to the earliest moments of European contact with Queensland. Matthew Flinders landed here in 1799. The first Queensland penal colony was established just across Humpybong Creek in 1824. And today, it's a quiet bayside suburb where the biggest drama is whether you'll get a park at Pelican Park on a Sunday afternoon. The contrast between that dramatic history and Clontarf's peaceful present is what makes this suburb special.
Pelican Park, Clontarf โ€” the foreshore reserve stretching along Moreton Bay
Present Day

Pelican Park, Clontarf โ€” the long foreshore reserve that defines the suburb's character. Stretching along Moreton Bay with walking paths, playgrounds, and uninterrupted views across to Brisbane, it's the heart of a community that's been quietly growing since the 1880s.

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

Ningy Ningy Country and First Contact

Long before European arrival, the land now known as Clontarf was part of the traditional country of the Ningy Ningy people, who belonged to the Undambi language group. The Indigenous name for the wider Redcliffe area โ€” Kau-in-Kau-in โ€” referred to the blood-red cliffs visible from the bay, a name that captures the dramatic geology of the peninsula's western shoreline.

On July 17, 1799, Matthew Flinders โ€” the explorer who would later circumnavigate Australia โ€” landed at Clontarf Point during his survey of Moreton Bay. It was one of the first recorded European landings in the region. The point he named still bears the Clontarf name today, a quiet headland with views across the bay to Brisbane.

The First Queensland Settlement (1824)

Twenty-five years after Flinders' landing, the Redcliffe Peninsula became the site of Queensland's first European settlement. On September 13, 1824, Lieutenant Henry Miller arrived on the brig Amity with 14 soldiers and 29 prisoners, establishing a penal colony near what is now Humpybong Creek in Redcliffe, just a short distance from Clontarf's foreshore.

The settlement consisted of basic temporary structures โ€” huts and tents. But within months, problems emerged: unsuitable soil for farming, inadequate fresh water, and conflicts with the local Ningy Ningy people. By February 1825, the colony was abandoned, relocated to the Brisbane River where the modern city of Brisbane now stands. The settlement's remains were later referred to as Humpybong โ€” an Indigenous term meaning "dead houses" โ€” describing the abandoned huts. Clontarf's foreshore looks across this historic waterway โ€” the same stretch of bay that carried the Amity to its brief, ill-fated settlement.

"The name Clontarf is thought to derive from an Irish coastal fishing village, chosen for the similarity in their coastal environments and notable oyster beds. The Irish name translates to 'the Plain of the Bull' โ€” a reference to the rumbling sound of the sea over sandbanks." โ€” Redcliffe Peninsula history

The Irish Name and Early Development (1880s)

The area that would become Clontarf was designated as an agricultural reserve in the 1860s after the penal colony's abandonment. It wasn't until the 1880s that Clontarf began to develop as a residential area, with land sales for "Clontarf" and "Clontarf North" actively advertised. These promotions highlighted the prospect of a future "city of Redcliffe" and the convenience of a proposed ferry service to Brisbane.

The name Clontarf is thought to come from an Irish coastal fishing village โ€” chosen because of the similarity in their coastal environments and the notable oyster beds that lined both shores. The Irish "Clontarf" translates to "the Plain of the Bull", a reference to the rumbling sound of the sea over sandbanks. St Peter the Fisherman's Anglican Church, built on Lucinda Street, became a local landmark โ€” a fitting name for a community built around the bay.

The Hornibrook Bridge Era

The construction of the Hornibrook Bridge โ€” the first of three bridges connecting the Redcliffe Peninsula to Brisbane โ€” marked a turning point for Clontarf. The bridge dramatically reduced travel times from the peninsula to the city, transforming Clontarf from a remote coastal outpost into an accessible bayside suburb. The bridge was later replaced by the Houghton Highway and the Ted Smout Memorial Bridge, but the connection it established permanently changed Clontarf's character.

Clontarf Today

Clontarf today is a quiet, family-oriented bayside suburb with around 8,500 residents. Pelican Park is the centrepiece โ€” a long foreshore reserve stretching along the water with walking paths, playgrounds, picnic areas, and uninterrupted views across Moreton Bay to the Brisbane skyline. The park is named for the pelicans that gather along the foreshore, a daily reminder of the suburb's coastal character.

The Hercules Road shopping strip serves daily needs. The Kippa-Ring station on the Redcliffe Peninsula line is a short drive south. The median house price of around $780K makes Clontarf one of the more affordable bayside suburbs on the peninsula โ€” a suburb that witnessed the first European footfalls in Queensland, and is still a peaceful place to watch the sunset over the bay.

Who Should Buy Here?

Clontarf is for buyers who want genuine bayside living without the premium price tag. It's for families who will spend their weekends at Pelican Park, for retirees who appreciate the quiet coastal pace, and for anyone who likes the idea of living in a suburb where Flinders once landed, where Queensland's first settlers briefly made their home, and where the evening sun still sets over the same bay they sailed into.

Liveability

Living here

Liveability Score

6/10
Schools3/10
Transport3/10
Amenities6/10
Growth10/10
Family Fit10/10

Schools & Education

Clontarf Beach State SchoolPrimary (Pโ€“6) ยท Public

Walkability & Lifestyle

30/ 100 ยท Car-Dependent
  • 8 parks covering 10% of area
  • 1 per 1,000
  • Bike Score: Moderate โ€” coastal pathways
  • Clontarf Village โ€” IGA
  • Redcliffe 10 min

Transport

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

  • ~45 min by car
  • ~45 min via Houghton Hwy
  • Bus routes: 660, 661, 690
  • North Lakes, Caboolture, Brisbane City

People & Demographics

Clontarf has a median age of 37 with 65%. Household income averages $1,650/week (Mid-range). Population +5%.

5,491
Population
37
Median age
$1,650/week
Median household income
60%
Owner occupied
1,194/kmยฒ
Pop. density
2.7 people
Avg household size
Professionals
Top occupation
Around national median
Queensland โ€” 5th decile
Diversity Index
22% not Anglo-Australian
Top Ancestries
English (30%) ยท Australian (28%) ยท New Zealand (4%)

Best Fit

Who Clontarf suits

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

๐Ÿ‘จโ€๐Ÿ‘ฉโ€๐Ÿ‘งโ€๐Ÿ‘ฆ
Families
Clontarf offers 1 schools within the suburb and 8 parks, with a median age suited to family life.
๐Ÿ“ˆ
Investors
3.5% yield with a vacancy rate of 1.4%. ~10% annual capital growth. Steady demand
๐Ÿ 
First Home Buyers
Median house price $780,000. Relatively affordable entry point.
๐Ÿ”‘
Downsizers
Unit median $470,000. ~45 min by car ยท Units yield 4.6%

Property Data

Property โ€” Houses

$780,000
Median price
+12%
YoY growth
+3%
Quarterly growth
+65%
5-year growth
~10%
Annual capital growth
45
Sales volume (12mo)
28โ€“35 avg
Days on market
60%
Owner-occupied

Property โ€” Units

$470,000
Median price
+10%
YoY growth
+3.5%
Quarterly growth
20
Sales volume (12mo)
20โ€“28 avg
Days on market

Rental Market

๐Ÿ  House rental

$530/week
Median rent
3.5%
Gross yield
+7%
Rent growth (YoY)
+1.5%
Rent growth (QoQ)

๐Ÿข Unit rental

$400/week
Median rent
4.6%
Gross yield
+7.5%
Rent growth (YoY)
Demand indicators
Vacancy rate: 1.4%
Steady โ€” growing corridor with good amenity and transport links

Risk & Due Diligence

What to know before buying

Safety & Crime Intelligence

Crime score: 20/100 โ€” significantly safer than QLD & national benchmarks across most categories.

35% lower
Break-ins vs QLD avg
22% lower
Break-ins vs national
30% lower
Vehicle theft vs QLD
25% lower
Violent crime vs QLD
Trend (2020โ€“2024, all crimes declining):
Break-ins โˆ’5% ยท Vehicle theft โˆ’14% ยท Violent โˆ’4.5%
Chance of violent crime: 1 in 195

Flood & Environmental Risk

Moderate โ€” low-lying coastal. Low. Always verify your specific property:

  • Check Moreton Bay Flood Viewer
  • Council flood planning overlay may apply
  • Insurance: check with provider โ€” flood premiums vary by specific lot

Development & Infrastructure Pipeline

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

Clontarf Foreshore Upgrade
Coastal pathway improvements
Infrastructure
  • Clontarf Beach
  • Hornibrook Esplanade
Population projection: Projected ~7000โ€“9000 by 2036

Top Sales

Updated: May 2026 ยท Public property records + market estimates

Recent recorded sales in Clontarf across the last 3 months.

DatePropertyPrice
May 2026 โ€” 1 sale
May 20264br, 22 Clontarf Rd$1,050,000
Data sourced from public property recordsView all sold listings โ†—

Investor Summary

~10%
Annual capital growth
3.5%
House rental yield
Units: 4.6%
1.4%
Vacancy rate
+7%
Rent growth (YoY)
  • Investor profile: Coastal lifestyle
  • Demand indicator: Steady demand
  • Gentrification risk: Low
  • Subdivision potential: Moderate

What Changed This Week

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

Beverley's real-world take

Living in Clontarf: Where the First Europeans Landed

Long before Brisbane was settled, before the Gold Coast existed, Matthew Flinders landed at Clontarf Point in 1799. Twenty-five years later, the first European settlement in Queensland was established just across the water โ€” a penal colony that lasted six months before being abandoned for the Brisba

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

Thinking about buying or selling in Clontarf?

Beverley knows Clontarfinside out. Get an honest assessment of your property's potential โ€” no obligation, just straight talk.

Ask Beverley โ†—
โ† Back to all suburbs