Canberra's school system costs families substantially more than most assume, and the choices available depend heavily on where you buy a house and whether you can afford private education.
Families relocating to the capital are discovering that while government schools remain free, the ancillary costs—uniforms, excursions, contributions to building funds—add up quickly. More pressingly, access to sought-after public schools in established suburbs like Forrest and Red Hill depends entirely on your residential address, creating a de facto tuition system where proximity equals premium property prices. Meanwhile, private school fees at institutions like Canberra Grammar School and Brindabella Christian College now reach $20,000 to $28,000 annually for secondary students, figures that have jumped 15 percent since 2023.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics reported in March 2026 that Canberra's median family income sits at $145,000, yet the cost of raising two children through secondary education in private schools exceeds $450,000 over a decade. The ACT Education Directorate's 2025 data showed that demand for places at high-performing public schools in the inner north outstrips supply by roughly 30 percent each intake year.
Which suburbs, which schools, which prices
Families must understand that Canberra's school catchments operate as economic filters. A house in Yarralumla or Deakin—where schools like Canberra High and Lake Ginninderra College draw from—carries a $100,000 premium compared to equivalent properties in suburbs like Charnwood or Ngunnawal, partly because parents understand their children gain automatic access to better-resourced campuses. Real estate agents acknowledge this openly. A three-bedroom house in Deakin averages $850,000; the same property in Florey averages $620,000.
Private alternatives offer no zoning guarantees but market themselves on smaller class sizes and specialised programs. Canberra Grammar School operates two campuses—one in Red Hill for primary students, another in Forrest for secondary—and admits roughly 1,200 students annually from a waiting list that can stretch 18 months. Brindabella Christian College in Gowrie charges $16,500 for primary enrolment, climbing to $27,500 for year 12, and caps enrolment at 1,450 students across all year levels.
Marist College Canberra in Braddon occupies a middle ground: fees run $19,000 to $24,000 per year, and the school maintains a strong reputation for both academic and sporting outcomes without the prestige pricing of Grammar.
Hidden costs and the full picture
Parents should budget for expenses beyond tuition. Government schools request voluntary contributions ranging from $300 to $800 annually, though technically these remain optional. Uniforms run $350 to $600 per child depending on school. Books, stationery, and technology levies add another $200 to $400 each year. Private schools bundle many of these into fees but add compulsory technology programs—laptops and tablets can cost $1,200 to $1,800—and ancillary charges for excursions, sporting events, and specialist subjects like music lessons.
The ACT government operates a needs-based assistance scheme for low-income families, providing school start-up grants of up to $250 and covering excursion costs for households earning below $65,000 annually. Few families know about these programs, and uptake remains below 40 percent of eligible participants.
First-time movers to Canberra should contact the ACT Education Directorate's enrolment team at least four months before intended school entry. Request a school catchment map and visit multiple campuses—what works for one family falls flat for another. If considering private education, attend open days in May and June; admission deadlines often close by August for the following year. Check whether your workplace offers salary-sacrifice education benefits; several major Canberra employers—Australian Securities and Investments Authority, Geoscience Australia, and the National University Hospital—contribute to staff members' school fees through pre-tax deduction schemes.