Located in Western Australia within the Harvey local government area, Warawarrup is a small, quiet locality (postcode 6220). It is home to about 137 residents, with an older-leaning population and a median age of 54. Households earn a median income of $80K per year, with an average household size of 2.5 people. Recent annual estimates show population movement into the broader catchment, with population growth running at +1.9% year-on-year at the LGA level. WA employment has moved +1.9% year-on-year in the official ABS Labour Force trend series, which provides the broader jobs backdrop for this suburb. WA also had 24 Commonwealth-backed major projects under construction, 12 underway, and 12 in planning as at 2025-09-01, which is useful as a broader delivery backdrop rather than a suburb-specific project count. The most common occupations are technicians & trades, machinery operators & drivers, managers. Employment in the area leans toward manufacturing and agriculture. The top ancestries reported are English, Australian, Italian.
Warawarrup has a median house price of $603,000, which has climbed sharply by 31.8% year-on-year. The median weekly rent is $265 (Census 2021). This gives a gross rental yield of approximately 2.3%. The median monthly mortgage repayment is $1,820.
On the investment side, The gross rental yield works out to roughly 2.3%, which reads as low yield. Property prices sit below the state median ($603K/$1.0M), which can point to relative value. The price-to-income ratio of 7.5x is considered moderate. House prices have moved +31.8% year-on-year. Population growth of +1.9% year-on-year points to stable demand fundamentals. Building approvals have changed +0% year-on-year, indicating steady development activity.