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Lawnton 4501

Northern growth corridor ยท City of Moreton Bay ยท 4.3 kmยฒ ยท Walk Score 30/100

โšก Beverley's read

Lawnton the unsung hero of the Caboolture line ? a functional, family-oriented suburb that's been absorbing commuters for decades without ever making a fuss about it. Thirty-two kilometres north of Brisbane with its own station, a decent shopping centre, and a median house price around $750,000, it's one of the more affordable options within an hour of the CBD by train. The Lawnton Country Markets on Sundays are a genuine local institution, and the South Pine River corridor gives it a green spine that the big estates lack.

Market Pulse

$710,000
Median house price
+11.5%
YoY growth
$520/week
Median rent
3.8%
Rental yield
28โ€“35 avg
Days on market

Living in Lawnton

Living in Lawnton: The Blacksmith Who Built a Suburb

Lawnton has a secret history that most of its 5,900 residents don't know. The suburb is named after a Yorkshire blacksmith. It was home to one of Queensland's most successful cornflour mills โ€” the Paisley brand, sold across Australia. And for decades, a government society used 100 acres of its river flats to trial avocados, custard apples, and pecan nuts for the first time in Queensland. The suburb that grew around the Lawnton railway station is richer in history than its quiet commuter character suggests.
Lawnton โ€” looking across the suburb towards the North Pine River
Present Day

Lawnton, looking across the suburb towards the North Pine River. The Caboolture train line carries commuters to Brisbane in 35 minutes, just as it has since 1888 when the station opened and gave the suburb its name.

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Stephen Lawn's Smithy (1862โ€“1888)

The story of Lawnton begins with Stephen Lawn (1836โ€“1917), a farmer, blacksmith, and wheelwright from Helmsley, Yorkshire. He arrived in Queensland in 1862 โ€” the same year the first farm allotments along the North Pine River were surveyed and put up for sale. Lawn selected land north of the river in partnership with John Atkinson Thompson, but he was a blacksmith by trade, so he built a small smithy to supplement his income from farming.

The Gympie gold rush, which began in 1867, brought extra traffic through the district โ€” prospectors heading north needed horses shod, carts repaired, and tools sharpened. Lawn's smithy became a busy stop on the route. The blacksmithing business proved more profitable than farming, and in 1873, he bought better land south of the river โ€” near the site of today's Lawnton Tavern โ€” and moved his business there.

When the North Coast Railway was surveyed in 1887, some of Lawn's land was acquired for the line. The Lawnton Railway Station โ€” and the district around it โ€” was named in his honour. The station opened in 1888, and until the 1930s, when road transport took over, large quantities of fresh milk were railed to Brisbane from Lawnton every day.

The Cornflour Mill (1898โ€“1960s)

In 1898, a landmark industrial complex opened on land bounded by Four Mile Creek and Gympie Road โ€” the Lawnton Cornflour and Starch Mills, established by Walter Francis. The mill bought maize from farmers across the district, railed in via the Lawnton station, and processed it into cornflour that was marketed under the 'Paisley' brand โ€” named after Paisley, Scotland, which had a famous cornflour mill.

Walter Francis had tested water from creeks around Brisbane and found that Four Mile Creek had the purest supply. The mill used that water to produce between three and four tons of cornflour every week by the late 1920s. The business operated for over sixty years, running under three generations of the Francis family until it closed in the 1960s. The complex of buildings stood for more than 90 years before being demolished โ€” a mark of Lawnton's industrial heritage that most residents today have never heard of.

"Seventy years ago Lawnton was dense scrub, from which valuable timbers were obtained. Later, when the scrub was cleared, mixed farming was taken up, with much of the land being of exceptional fertility, owing to periodic floodings by the Pine River." โ€” Brisbane Courier, 22 August 1931

The Acclimatisation Society (1905โ€“1930s)

In 1905, the Queensland Acclimatisation Society โ€” first formed in 1862 to import and trial overseas plants โ€” moved its operations from Bowen Hills to 100 acres on the south bank of the North Pine River at Lawnton. By the end of 1908, the property was trialling sugarcane, pineapples, papaws, cotton, raspberries, date palms, mangoes, olives, citrus, and cassava. In later years, particular success was achieved with avocados, custard apples, pecan nuts, and soya beans โ€” crops that had never been grown commercially in Queensland before the Society proved they could thrive here.

By the late 1930s, the Lawnton land had been worked out after several decades of very successful activity, and the Society moved to Redland Bay. Not long after, the Society voluntarily dissolved, its mission accomplished โ€” the C.S.I.R.O. and the Queensland Department of Agriculture had taken over the role of agricultural research. But Lawnton's river flats had played a crucial role in diversifying Queensland's food production.

Lawnton Today

Lawnton in 2026 is home to about 5,900 people, sitting between Petrie and Strathpine on the Caboolture line. The Lawnton railway station connects to Brisbane in about 35 minutes. The suburb developed mostly from the 1960s through 1980s, filling the gap between Strathpine and Petrie with solid brick-and-tile homes on generous blocks.

Leis Park on the North Pine River is Lawnton's standout amenity โ€” a popular fishing and picnic spot with river access, walking trails, and a boat ramp. Lawnton State School and Lawnton State High School serve local families. The Lawnton Country Markets are a local institution, drawing visitors from across the corridor. The median house price of $710K makes it one of the more affordable train-served suburbs in the northern corridor.

Who Should Buy Here?

Lawnton is for buyers who appreciate that a suburb with a 35-minute train commute, a riverfront park, and a median under $750K is becoming a rare thing in Brisbane's northern corridor. It's for families who want the convenience of the train line without the premium of the inner stations. It's for anyone who appreciates that beneath the quiet commuter surface lies a history โ€” a Yorkshire blacksmith, a cornflour mill, and the avocado pioneers of Queensland agriculture โ€” that most residents walk past every day without knowing.

Liveability

Living here

Liveability Score

7/10
Schools3/10
Transport5/10
Amenities5/10
Growth10/10
Family Fit10/10

Schools & Education

Lawnton State SchoolPrimary (Pโ€“6) ยท Public

Walkability & Lifestyle

30/ 100 ยท Car-Dependent
  • 8 parks covering 9% of area
  • 1 per 1,000
  • Bike Score: Low โ€” limited dedicated cycling infrastructure
  • Lawnton Shopping Centre โ€” IGA

Transport

Train station: Lawnton. Peak frequency Every 15โ€“30 min peak.

  • ~35 min by train
  • ~30 min via Bruce Hwy
  • Bus routes: 660, 662
  • North Lakes, Caboolture, Brisbane City

People & Demographics

Lawnton has a median age of 34 with 70%. Household income averages $1,650/week (Mid-range). Population +5%.

5,373
Population
34
Median age
$1,650/week
Median household income
60%
Owner occupied
1,250/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 Lawnton suits

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

๐Ÿ‘จโ€๐Ÿ‘ฉโ€๐Ÿ‘งโ€๐Ÿ‘ฆ
Families
Lawnton offers 1 schools within the suburb and 8 parks, with a median age suited to family life.
๐Ÿ“ˆ
Investors
3.8% yield with a vacancy rate of 1.3%. ~9.5% annual capital growth. Steady demand
๐Ÿ 
First Home Buyers
Median house price $710,000. 1 train station for city access. Relatively affordable entry point.
๐Ÿ”‘
Downsizers
Unit median $430,000. ~35 min by train ยท Units yield 4.6%

Property Data

Property โ€” Houses

$710,000
Median price
+11.5%
YoY growth
+3%
Quarterly growth
+60%
5-year growth
~9.5%
Annual capital growth
65
Sales volume (12mo)
28โ€“35 avg
Days on market
60%
Owner-occupied

Property โ€” Units

$430,000
Median price
+10%
YoY growth
+3.5%
Quarterly growth
20
Sales volume (12mo)
20โ€“28 avg
Days on market

Rental Market

๐Ÿ  House rental

$520/week
Median rent
3.8%
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: 1.3%
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

Low-moderate. Low-moderate. 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

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

Lawnton Station Upgrades
Platform and accessibility
Infrastructure
  • Lawnton Station โ€” Redcliffe Peninsula line
Population projection: Projected ~7000โ€“9000 by 2036

Top Sales

Updated: May 2026 ยท Public property records + market estimates

Recent recorded sales in Lawnton across the last 3 months.

DatePropertyPrice
May 2026 โ€” 1 sale
May 20264br, 22 Gympie Rd$950,000
Data sourced from public property recordsView all sold listings โ†—

Investor Summary

~9.5%
Annual capital growth
3.8%
House rental yield
Units: 4.6%
1.3%
Vacancy rate
+7%
Rent growth (YoY)
  • Investor profile: Affordable corridor with train access
  • Demand indicator: Steady demand
  • Gentrification risk: Low
  • Subdivision potential: Moderate

What Changed This Week

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

Beverley's real-world take

Living in Lawnton: The Blacksmith Who Built a Suburb

Between Petrie and Strathpine on the North Pine River, Lawnton is named after Stephen Lawn โ€” a Yorkshire blacksmith who arrived in 1862, set up a smithy to service Gympie gold rush traffic, and got a railway station named after him when the North Coast line came through in 1888. The suburb that grew

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.

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