About this property
Also written as Unit 2, 100 Dwyer Circuit.
Driver NT 0830, Australia
Also written as Unit 2, 100 Dwyer Circuit.
Based on curated rent estimate.
Confidence ratings show how closely the estimate matches the comparable property data we currently have.
There is a stronger pool of recent, relevant comparison data and the subject property lines up closely with those comparable properties.
There is a reasonable amount of comparison data, but the closest matches may vary more in type, size, timing or location.
There are fewer recent comparable properties available, or the known examples are less similar to the subject property.
These figures are estimates and broad indications only. They are generated from recorded property attributes and available third-party market data, without a physical inspection of the property.
They are not a professional valuation, appraisal, legal opinion or financial recommendation. No person should rely on them as the sole basis for a purchase, sale, lease, lending or investment decision.
Yardize does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of any rent estimate, value estimate, range or confidence score, and no legal claim can be made against us for reliance on this information.
Based on the comparable property evidence currently available.
| Event | Date | Price | Price per m² |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sale | 12 Aug 2005 | $138,000 | — |
It is a unit featuring three bedrooms and one bathroom, set on an 813 m² block
The lot size is 813 square metres, providing ample outdoor space for a unit of this size
Driver, the suburb where the unit sits, lies roughly 23 km southeast of the Darwin CBD
The City of Palmerston is the governing municipality for Driver and the surrounding area
Residents are close to several parks, including Pretty Park (~0.4 km), Hayward Park (~0.5 km), Reg Hillier Park (~0.6 km), and McInnis Park (~0.7 km)
Palmerston City, the CBD of the satellite city, is about 0.7 km away, making it easily reachable on foot or by bike
Driver was named after Arthur Driver, the NT Administrator from 1946‑1951, noted for his 1947 rescue of Bas Wie and his role as the first President of the Legislative Council. The suburb’s development mainly dates from the early 1980s
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