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Light Rail Stage 2 Is Already Doing the Heavy Lifting on Woden Property Prices

With construction milestones ticking over and a 2028 completion target looming, homes within walking distance of the new Woden corridor are commanding premiums that weren't there two years ago.

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By Canberra Property Desk · Published 4 July 2026, 7:25 am

4 min read

Updated 5 h ago· 4 July 2026, 7:58 am

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This article was generated by AI from the linked public sources. The Daily Canberra is independently owned and covers Canberra news free from advertiser or sponsor influence. Read our editorial standards →

Light Rail Stage 2 Is Already Doing the Heavy Lifting on Woden Property Prices
Photo: Photo by Littlehampton Bricks on Pexels

Property values along the Stage 2 light rail corridor — the 7.5-kilometre extension running south from the City interchange through Woden Town Centre — have climbed by an estimated 8 to 12 percent above the broader ACT median since construction activity intensified in early 2025, according to analysis by the ACT Planning Directorate and corroborated by recent sales data from CoreLogic. The ACT median house price sits at around $835,000, meaning buyers in suburbs like Phillip and Curtin are now regularly transacting above $920,000 for comparable stock.

The timing matters. Canberra's auction clearance rate has settled at roughly 65 percent across the territory, and the broader national picture shows sellers in stalled markets struggling to offload property. Against that backdrop, the Woden valley is something of an outlier — vendors there are finding motivated buyers who are pricing future convenience explicitly into their offers.

Suburb by Suburb, the Gap Is Widening

The strongest gains are clustering within 800 metres of the planned stops. Phillip, which sits adjacent to the Woden Town Centre bus interchange and the proposed Callam Street stop, has recorded a string of sales above $950,000 for four-bedroom homes this quarter. Hughes, one suburb further west along Wisdom Street, is catching up fast. Agents working the southern corridor report that open-home attendance in both suburbs jumped noticeably after the ACT government confirmed the Yarra Glen overpass works would begin ahead of schedule in March 2026.

Curtin is also drawing attention it hasn't seen in years. The suburb's proximity to the proposed Curtin stop on Dalrymple Avenue has helped it shed a reputation for being slightly overlooked in favour of neighbouring Garran or Griffith. A three-bedroom home on Bremer Street sold in late June for $1.01 million — the first time a standard three-bedder on that street had crossed the million-dollar mark.

The pattern echoes what happened along the Stage 1 corridor, which runs from the City to Gungahlin via EPIC and Dickson. Research published by the Australian National University's urban economics group in 2023 found that properties within 600 metres of Stage 1 stops appreciated roughly 10 percent faster than the Canberra average in the three years following construction commencement. The Stage 2 data is tracking similarly.

What Buyers and Sellers Should Be Doing Now

For buyers, the practical calculation is increasingly urgent. Each quarter that passes without a purchase in Phillip or Curtin is a quarter of corridor-premium appreciation absorbed by the current owner rather than the next one. The Stage 2 project, managed by Transport Canberra, remains on track for a 2028 operational date, which means there are still roughly two years for values to run before the infrastructure premium shifts from speculative to realised.

Investors holding stock in established Gungahlin corridors — particularly around the Kippax Group Centre in Holt or along the Belconnen to City bus rapid transit route — may want to assess whether rebalancing toward Woden makes strategic sense before the construction-phase buzz fades into background noise.

For sellers in Phillip, Hughes and Curtin, the advice from agents active in those markets is consistent: list before mid-2027. That is when the project reaches maximum construction visibility — cranes up, road closures active, the full footprint of the new line physically obvious to any buyer inspecting a home. Historically, that phase generates the strongest emotional uplift in buyer willingness to pay. Once a line opens and becomes routine, the premium compresses back toward a structural baseline.

The ACT government's Urban Renewal Authority, which oversees the Woden Town Centre revitalisation master plan, is expected to release updated density guidelines for the Callam Street and Melrose Drive precincts before the end of 2026. Those changes, when they land, will determine just how much new apartment stock enters the corridor — and whether the supply response blunts the price story that is, for now, running in sellers' favour.

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Published by The Daily Canberra

Covering property in Canberra. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources and was not reviewed by a human editor before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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