Chifley has spent decades being confused with its more famous neighbour. Buyers looking at Torrens or Pearce would drive through, clock the wide leafy streets and the dated 1960s brick, and keep going. That calculation is changing fast. The ACT Planning Authority flagged Chifley's Melrose Drive corridor in its June 2026 draft district strategy as a candidate for mixed-use intensification — a bureaucratic phrase that, in practice, means higher-density residential and retail development on land currently zoned CZ5 mixed use but largely occupied by single-storey service businesses.
The timing matters for a specific reason. The broader ACT government push under the 2024 District Strategies program to concentrate growth along existing bus corridors has finally reached the inner south. Chifley sits within 6 kilometres of the Parliamentary Triangle, is served by the Rapid 7 bus route along Melrose Drive, and has a median house price that still sits roughly $130,000 below the ACT-wide median of $835,000. That gap has persisted because Chifley lacked a compelling catalyst. The rezoning proposal is that catalyst.
What the Draft Strategy Actually Proposes
The Planning Authority's draft — open for public comment until 25 July 2026 — identifies a strip roughly between the Chifley shops on Starke Street and the intersection at Melrose Drive and Athllon Drive as suitable for buildings up to six storeys. Current zoning caps most commercial sites at two. The strategy explicitly links the corridor to Woden Town Centre, about 2.5 kilometres north, where the under-construction Woden CIT campus and the Light Rail Stage 2B planning work are already pushing developer interest southward.
A separate ACT government tender issued in May 2026 sought expressions of interest from developers for surplus Housing ACT land at three sites in the Woden Valley district, with Chifley listed as one of the preferred investigation areas. That document, reference number ACTGOV-2026-INFRA-0041, has not been publicly linked to the rezoning strategy, but the overlap in geography is not coincidental.
Comparable dynamics have played out elsewhere. In Belconnen, the 2019 rezoning of the Emu Bank foreshore preceded a 34 per cent median price increase in Belconnen suburb proper over the following four years, according to CoreLogic data. Gungahlin's Flemington Road corridor rezoning in 2018 produced a similar pattern. Neither happened overnight. Chifley is not Belconnen's lakeside, and anyone expecting a six-month windfall is misreading the timeline. But the structural setup — proximity to jobs, existing infrastructure, undervalued land — is real.
What Buyers Are Actually Paying Now
Domain data for the 12 months to May 2026 shows Chifley's median house price at approximately $705,000, based on 38 transactions. That's a suburb where a three-bedroom 1960s home on a 700-square-metre block — the kind with a carport and original Canberra brick — can still be bought for under $750,000. Units, most of them in small 1970s walk-up blocks on Bindel Street and around the shops, are trading at a median of $480,000. Both figures are well below what equivalent properties achieve in neighbouring Torrens or Isaacs.
The low vacancy rate across the inner south — Canberra-wide it sat at 0.8 per cent as of the June 2026 REIACT quarterly report — means rental yield on Chifley units is running at around 5.1 per cent gross, above the ACT average of 4.3 per cent. Public servant buyers, who dominate purchase activity in this price band, have historically favoured suburbs inside the Tuggeranong Parkway loop for the commute to the Russell and Barton office precincts. Chifley qualifies.
Practical advice for anyone watching this closely: the public comment period on the draft strategy closes 25 July, and submissions from residents historically influence final zoning boundaries. That means the exact footprint of any upzoning is still contestable. Buyers drawn to the established-house streets east of Starke Street — closer to the Mount Taylor nature reserve boundary — should track whether those blocks end up included or excluded from the final zone. The distinction between a 700-square-metre block that carries development potential and one that doesn't will matter considerably to resale value five years from now. The ACT Planning Authority's online submission portal is the place to start.