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Perth Suburb Intelligence

Is Altona Good for a Café or Restaurant?

Demand 6/10: an established inner-west bayside village (11,490 residents, median age 42, household income $1,826/week — around the metro $1,901, 69.0% owner-occupied) with Maltese-Italian-Greek heritage character on Pier Street, a Werribee-line station and an Altona Beach summer pulse.

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CAUTIONBest fit: Café (65/100)
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Location score

61
out of 100

Verdict

CAUTION

Proceed with clear plan

65
Café
60
Restaurant
57
Retail

Factor Breakdown

Location factors

Demand, rent, competition, seasonality, and tourism — scored and weighted for Australian commercial operators.

6/10
Demand
5/10
Rent cost
4/10
Competition
3/10
Seasonality
3/10
Tourism dep

Business-Type Scores

How each format performs

Café / Specialty Coffee65
Full-Service Restaurant60
Independent Retail57

Scores use engine-derived weights: cafés weight demand and rent most heavily; restaurants factor tourism; retail factors tourism and demand equally.

Analyst Notes — Altona

What the data says about this location

1

Demand 6/10: an established inner-west bayside village (11,490 residents, median age 42, household income $1,826/week — around the metro $1,901, 69.0% owner-occupied) with Maltese-Italian-Greek heritage character on Pier Street, a Werribee-line station and an Altona Beach summer pulse.

2

Competition 4/10: a quiet uncrowded Pier Street strip — the depth opening is for a quality casual format the village does not yet have at honest mid-income pricing.

3

Rent 5/10: inner-west bayside village rents — well below the Williamstown waterfront premium.

4

Seasonality 3/10: Altona Beach delivers a real but bounded December–February weekend uplift; year-round resident-and-village trade carries the off-season.

Local insight — Altona

On-the-ground read for operators

Editorial notes layered on top of the scored model — same scores and benchmarks above; this section translates strip mechanics into decisions.

Local reality check

Demand 6/10: an established inner-west bayside village (11,490 residents, median age 42, household income $1,826/week — around the metro $1,901, 69.0% owner-occupied) with Maltese-Italian-Greek heritage character on Pier Street, a Werribee-line station and an Altona Beach summer pulse.

Competition 4/10: a quiet uncrowded Pier Street strip — the depth opening is for a quality casual format the village does not yet have at honest mid-income pricing.

Rent 5/10: inner-west bayside village rents — well below the Williamstown waterfront premium.

Engine factors for Altona: demand 6/10, rent pressure 5/10, competition 4/10, seasonality risk 3/10, tourism dependency 3/10 — line scores café 65/100, restaurant 60/100, retail 57/100.

Competition is lighter than inner strips — validate why (gap vs weak demand) before assuming easy trade.

Micro-location breakdown

Altona main strip / highest visibility

What tends to work: Service-led and neighbourhood concepts with repeat local trade.

What struggles: Formats needing highway visibility or large-format parking ratios.

Rent vs foot traffic: Prime band often near $3,503–$4,483/mo — Rent pressure 5/10 — treat agent ranges as opening positions; model $/sqm and outgoings before emotional commitment.

Secondary street / side pocket

What tends to work: Operators who accept lower passer-by counts but fund discovery through product, hours, or events.

What struggles: Walk-in-only models with no marketing budget or brand recognition.

Rent vs foot traffic: Secondary band often near $2,768–$3,503/mo — savings must fund signage and fit-out amortisation, not disappear into rent alone.

Budget / upstairs / off-strip

What tends to work: Studios, appointment services, niche retail with owned traffic.

What struggles: Full-service dining depending on spontaneous footfall without a booking channel.

Rent vs foot traffic: Lower band near $1,799–$2,768/mo — viable only when customers arrive by intent, not accident.

Real business scenarios

  • If prime rent clears near $3,503–$4,483/mo, model daily covers at your real average ticket — the engine verdict is CAUTION at 61/100, not a guarantee at your address.
  • Tourism dependency 3/10: when elevated, January and shoulder weeks need explicit planning, not December extrapolation.
  • Run competitors within 500m before offer — Competition is lighter than inner strips — validate why (gap vs weak demand) before assuming easy trade.

Competitive reality

Altona (CAUTION, 61/100) is a modelled read across demand, rent, competition, and seasonality — validate on-site at quiet and peak dayparts, then reconcile with your accountant before lease execution.

Sharp verdict

Altona pays off when rent sits inside $3,503–$4,483/mo at conservative revenue — do not sign on suburb hype; sign on covers you can defend on a Tuesday.

Methodology: Scores are engine-derived from five observable inputs (demand strength, rent pressure, competition density, seasonality risk, tourism dependency — each 1–10). These feed into business-type-specific weighted composites via a single scoring engine used across all markets. Scores are relative estimates calibrated across all Perth suburbs — a score of 80 indicates materially better conditions than 65; it is not a success probability or guarantee.

Frequently Asked Decision Questions

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