By the Numbers: What Data Reveals About Sunshine Coast's Multicultural Surge
New migration figures show the Sunshine Coast's international population has grown by 34% in three years, reshaping neighbourhoods from Mooloolaba to Noosa Heads.
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The Sunshine Coast's transformation into a multicultural hub is no longer anecdotal—the numbers tell a compelling story of demographic shift that's reshaping the region's character, economy and social fabric.
According to latest Australian Bureau of Statistics data released this month, the Sunshine Coast's overseas-born population has reached 28.4% of total residents, up from 21.2% in 2023. That represents approximately 89,000 people born outside Australia, with the growth concentrated in key precincts: Mooloolaba (41% overseas-born), Alexandra Headland (38%), and Noosa Heads (35%).
The data breakdown reveals which nations are driving this influx. Indian-born residents comprise 8,200 of the total (a 67% increase since 2023), while Chinese-born populations stand at 6,400 (up 41%). British and New Zealand migrants remain substantial cohorts at 12,100 and 9,800 respectively, though their growth rates (12% and 8%) lag behind emerging communities from the Philippines (4,100; up 89%), Brazil (2,200; up 112%), and South Africa (1,950; up 58%).
Real estate agents on Hastings Street report median rental prices for two-bedroom apartments have climbed 22% year-on-year to $2,450 weekly, reflecting competitive demand from skilled migrant workers in technology, healthcare, and hospitality sectors. The Sunshine Coast Council's latest business registration data shows 340 new ventures launched by migrants in Q1 2026 alone—representing 31% of all new business registrations across the region.
Employment figures underscore economic integration: migrant workers occupy 24% of professional roles in the region's healthcare sector, while comprising 44% of hospitality and tourism workforce positions. The Sunshine Coast Institute of Multicultural Studies reports that 67% of recent arrivals secure employment within six months, above the national average of 54%.
Language diversity is equally striking. While English remains dominant, 34 languages are now spoken in Sunshine Coast homes as a first language other than English. Mandarin speakers number 6,200; Hindi speakers 5,100; and Portuguese speakers 3,400—with smaller but growing communities speaking Tagalog, Afrikaans, and Japanese.
Educational enrolment data shows international student numbers at Sunshine Coast universities and colleges reached 4,100 this semester, generating an estimated $185 million in direct economic contribution. Migration agents operating from offices in Caloundra and Maroochydore processed 1,240 visa applications in the first half of 2026.
Council officials acknowledge the statistical reality requires infrastructure planning. Transport, housing, and community services planning documents now explicitly factor 3.2% annual population growth—double the national average—as baseline projections through 2035.
This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.
This article was produced by the The Daily Sunshine Coast editorial desk and covers news in Sunshine Coast. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.
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