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Town by Town Snapshot: Jan Juc

May 28, 2020 BY

The most recent recorded sale in Jan Juc was this three-bedroom home built in 2010, which sold this month for $920,000.

The size of Jan Juc is about 6.2 square kilometres and has four parks covering nearly 2.1 per cent of total area.

The population of Jan Juc in 2011 was 3,521 people and by the 2016 Census the population was 3,686 showing a population growth of 4.7 per cent in the area during that time.
During the mid-1960s, the coastal township of Jan Juc began to be developed, situated on a coastline close to some of the area’s best surfing beaches and a few kilometres from Bells Beach.
By 1992 there were nearly 1,200 dwellings in Jan Juc and an estimated population of 1,791. About one-third of these dwellings were holiday houses.
Jan Juc has certainly transformed itself from an area that was once dominated by holiday shacks and student accommodation dotted along unsealed roads with dodgy creek crossings.
Once considered Torquay’s poorer sister, Jan Juc now dominates the Torquay property market with the median house price consistently above that of Torquay’s. In recent times, Jan Juc’s median house price has exceeded Torquay’s by more than $100,000.
The main reason Juc has become so popular with homeowners and investors is that it is just not Torquay.
Relatively protected from development and population growth, Jan Juc is somewhat isolated from the pressures that Torquay faces in regards to traffic, development and commercial activity. For some Jan Juc residents, the thought of moving back across the bridge horrifies them.
CoreLogic data indicates that the predominant age group in Jan Juc is 40-49 years with households in Jan Juc being primarily couples with children and are likely to be repaying $1,800-$2,399 per month on mortgage repayments, and in general, people in Jan Juc work in a professional occupation.
In 2011, 73.1 per cent of the homes in Jan Juc were owner-occupied compared with 74.2 per cent in 2016.