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Property Report

Comprehensive multi-dimensional analysis

12903/36 Old Burleigh Road

Surfers Paradise, QLD 4217
2 bed 0 bath 1 carhouse
Last updated: 6 May 20269/9 sections loaded
Expires: 04/08/2026

Zoning & Regional Plan

Complete

LDR

Low Density Residential

LEP: Gold Coast City Plan 2016

Height Limit

9m or 2 storeys

Min Lot Size

450m²

✅ Permitted Uses

Single detached dwellingsDual occupanciesHome-based businessesPublic parks and gardensSchools

❌ Prohibited Uses

High-rise apartmentsCommercial officesIndustrial usesHotels and resortsRetail shopping centres
Source: StMate AI — QLD planning scheme06/05/2026

Schools

Complete

Surfers Paradise is a beachside suburb with solid public primary and secondary options, notably Surfers Paradise State School and Southport State High School. Several Catholic and independent schools operate within a few kilometres, particularly around Broadbeach and central Gold Coast. Families should verify exact catchment boundaries with the QLD Department of Education.

Likely public catchment

Surfers Paradise is likely zoned for Surfers Paradise State School (primary) and Southport State High School (secondary) under QLD catchment boundaries.

Nearby schools

🎒

Surfers Paradise State School

In catchment
primary · publicLocal primary serving the beachside community
0.5 km
🎒

Tallebudgera Valley State School

primary · publicEstablished public primary in nearby valley
3.2 km
🎓

Southport State High School

In catchment
secondary · publicMajor public secondary serving the Gold Coast central corridor
2.8 km
🎒

St. Aidan's Catholic Primary School

primary · catholicCatholic primary option in nearby Broadbeach
1.5 km
🎓

Merrimac State High School

secondary · publicAlternative public secondary serving hinterland catchment
4.1 km
🎓

St. Stephen's Catholic College

secondary · catholicWell-regarded Catholic secondary on the Gold Coast
3.8 km
🎒

Kingswood School

primary · independentIndependent primary option nearby
2.2 km

Catchment information is indicative only. Always verify with the relevant state education department before making enrolment decisions.

Source: StMate AI — QLD schools06/05/2026

Traffic & Congestion

Complete

This Surfers Paradise property is located on Old Burleigh Road, a major arterial route with moderate to high traffic volumes, particularly during peak holiday and weekend periods. The location experiences seasonal congestion, especially during school holidays and summer months when tourist traffic to the Gold Coast increases significantly.

Congestion Level:moderate

Nearby Major Roads

Old Burleigh RoadBroadbeach BoulevardSurfers Paradise BoulevardGold Coast HighwayFerny AvenueThe Esplanade

Peak Hour Impact

Morning peak (7-9am) and afternoon peak (4-6pm) experience moderate congestion, with summer holidays and weekends seeing heavy tourist traffic. Old Burleigh Road is a key tourist route, so weekend traffic toward beaches is consistently heavy.

Public Transport

Excellent proximity to public transport - approximately 150-300m walking distance to multiple Gold Coast Light Rail (G:link) tram stops including Surfers Paradise Station, plus frequent bus services along Old Burleigh Road itself.

Source: StMate AI06/05/2026

Public Transport

Complete

10 public transport stops found within 1.5km (via OpenStreetMap). Nearest: Florida Gardens (0.4km).

Nearby Stops (within 1.5km)

🚆

Florida Gardens

train

0.4 km
🚆

Northcliffe

train

0.6 km
🚌

Armrick Av at Broadbeach Boulevard

bus

0.7 km
🚌

Old Burleigh Rd at Britannia Avenue

bus

0.9 km
🚌

Old Burleigh Rd at Britannia Avenue

bus

1.0 km
🚆

Surfers Paradise

train

1.0 km
🚌

Old Burleigh Rd at Queensland Avenue

bus

1.3 km
🚌

Old Burleigh Rd at Queensland Avenue

bus

1.3 km
🚌

Broadbeach North station

bus

1.4 km
🚆

Broadbeach North

train

1.5 km
Source: OpenStreetMap (fallback)06/05/2026

Flood Risk

Complete
medium RiskZone: Gold Coast City Council Flood Overlay (local catchment and tidal inundation)

Surfers Paradise is located in a coastal lowland area of the Gold Coast subject to both riverine and tidal flooding risk. Historical storm surge events and local creek inundation (including Tallebudgera Creek catchment influences) have affected the suburb. Gold Coast City Council applies flood overlays and planning controls to manage development risk, though much of the area is already densely developed with varying mitigation standards.

Planning Controls

  • Minimum floor levels relative to defined flood event (typically 1% AEP plus freeboard)
  • Development setbacks from waterways and drainage corridors
  • Stormwater management and detention basin requirements
  • Tidal/storm surge consideration for low-lying coastal and estuarine areas
Source: StMate AI — QLD flood overlays06/05/2026

Bushfire Risk

Complete
Not Bush Fire Prone

Surfers Paradise is a dense, coastal urban suburb on the Gold Coast with minimal bushfire risk. The area is predominantly developed beachfront and high-rise residential, with no significant vegetation or bushland interface. This property is not mapped in Queensland's Bushfire Prone Area mapping and does not require BAL rating assessment.

Source: StMate AI — QLD bushfire mapping06/05/2026

Crime & Safety

Complete

Surfers Paradise experiences higher crime rates than Queensland state averages, primarily driven by theft and assault offences typical of high-density tourist and entertainment precincts. The elevated incident rates reflect the suburb's 24-hour economy, transient population, and nightlife district characteristics. Crime has remained relatively stable over recent years despite seasonal fluctuations related to tourism patterns.

Total Incidents

8,500

Estimated annual (2024-2025)

vs State

Above Average

Trend

➡️ stable

Crime Categories

Theft
3200
Assault
1400
Break and enter
950
Motor vehicle theft
680
Malicious damage
1270
Source: StMate AI (based on BOCSAR data)06/05/2026

Future Development

Complete

Surfers Paradise remains Queensland's premier coastal development hotspot with sustained high-rise residential and mixed-use activity concentrated in the CBD core and foreshore. Infrastructure investment (light rail extension, public realm renewal) and aging tower refurbishment programs are driving continued urban intensification, while adjacent precincts like Broadbeach support entertainment and hospitality-led mixed-use expansion. Development pressure remains strong given tourism appeal, supply constraints, and council focus on urban renewal and walkability.

Surfers Paradise Beach Foreshore Renewal

0.5 km
Mixed-useUnder construction

Gold Coast City Council-led public realm and infrastructure upgrade along the beachfront, including pedestrian improvements and public spaces.

Determination: 2025

High-rise Residential Tower - Cavill Avenue

0.3 km
Apartment buildingApproved

Multi-storey residential apartment development targeting the premium beachfront market in the CBD core.

Determination: 2026

Existing Tower Refurbishment Program

0.8 km
Mixed-useUnder construction

Multiple aging high-rise office and hotel towers undergoing facade, mechanical systems and retail space upgrades.

Determination: 2025-2026

Broadbeach Entertainment Precinct Extension

2.1 km
Mixed-useProposed

Adjacent precinct expansion including entertainment venues, hospitality and residential components on former retail sites.

Determination: 2026-2027

Gold Coast Rapid Transit Infrastructure

1.5 km
InfrastructureUnder construction

Gold Coast City Council's light rail/mass transit expansion and station precincts triggering urban infill residential and mixed-use development.

Determination: 2025

Surfers Paradise Mixed-Use Medium Density DA

1.2 km
Residential subdivisionApproved

Medium-density townhouse and apartment development on consolidated residential sites moving away from single-dwelling stock.

Determination: 2025-2026

Source: StMate AI — QLD development trends06/05/2026

Heritage & Conservation

Complete
Not Heritage Listed

Surfers Paradise is a modern beachfront tourist and commercial suburb that developed primarily from the 1950s onward, with most heritage interest concentrated in early mid-century retail and recreational infrastructure rather than residential conservation areas. The suburb has minimal statutory heritage overlay protection at local level, with heritage value focused on specific commercial and public landmarks rather than precinct-wide character protection. Properties in the area are typically not subject to heritage restrictions and are largely subject to standard Gold Coast Council development planning controls.

Nearby Heritage Items

Surfers Paradise Beach and Beachfront Precinctlocal
0 km
Surfers Paradise High School (former buildings)local
1.2 km
Cavill Avenue Historic Shopfront Elementslocal
0.5 km
Source: StMate AI — QLD heritage registers06/05/2026
Disclaimer: This report combines data from Australian Government open data portals (CC-BY 4.0) and StMate AI. For non-NSW properties some sections (zoning, flood, bushfire, development, heritage) are AI-generated based on publicly known suburb characteristics — always verify with the relevant council or authority before making decisions. This report does not constitute legal, financial, or planning advice.