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Moving to Canberra: The Complete Guide for New Residents
Canberra catches a lot of newcomers off guard. It is not one downtown ringed by suburbs, but a cluster of self-contained districts separated by bushland and linked by major roads. Once you understand that structure, choosing where to live and getting set up becomes much simpler. This guide walks you through the layout, how to pick an area, the practical admin every new resident has to do, and where the official information actually lives.
First, understand the town-centre structure
Modern Canberra is organised into districts, each built around its own town centre that acts as the district's main hub for shops, services and transport. The main town centres are Civic (the Canberra city centre, on the north side), Belconnen, Gungahlin, Woden, Tuggeranong and Weston Creek, with Molonglo Valley as the newer growth area in between. This multi-centre pattern comes from the mid-century "Y Plan", which spread development along a Y-shaped corridor rather than building one dense central city. Tuggeranong sits at the base of the Y, with Belconnen and Gungahlin at the ends of the arms.
Lake Burley Griffin splits the city into a north side and a south side, and locals genuinely think in those terms. The lake is encircled by walking and cycling paths and bordered by most of the national institutions. The original layout, designed by Walter Burley Griffin and Marion Mahony Griffin after they won an international competition in 1912, is built around a land axis (Mount Ainslie to Capital Hill) and a water axis along the lake, meeting in the Parliamentary Triangle.
Choosing an area to live
Because each district is somewhat self-sufficient, your daily life is shaped heavily by which one you pick. A few practical pointers:
- Inner north (Civic, Braddon, Dickson, Lyneham, Turner): Closest to the city, the light rail line and the liveliest dining. Braddon and Dickson are walkable, cafe-dense and well connected.
- Inner south (Kingston, Griffith, Manuka, Yarralumla): Near the lake, the Parliamentary Triangle and Kingston Foreshore. Established and central.
- Gungahlin and the north: Newer suburbs, family-oriented, connected to the city by light rail (Gungahlin to Civic).
- Belconnen: A large district built around Lake Ginninderra, with beaches, swimming enclosures and an extensive cycleway network.
- Woden, Weston Creek and Tuggeranong (the south): More space, generally quieter, with Tuggeranong built around its own lake.
If you have school-age children, check the schooling angle before you commit to a suburb. ACT public schools use Priority Enrolment Areas (PEAs) tied to your home address, and your address guarantees a place at your PEA school but not necessarily a more popular out-of-area one. Some suburbs sit in shared zones. Confirm the current rules and find the school for any address via the ACT Government find a school and enrol pages.
The essentials to set up
The ACT is a single self-governing territory, so there are no separate councils or shire rates. Access Canberra is the front door for most government transactions (licences, registrations, permits), reachable on 13 22 81 and online.
Driver licence and vehicle
- If you hold a full interstate licence and intend to drive here, you generally have three months from moving to get an ACT licence. Transfers must be done in person at an Access Canberra Service Centre with proof of identity and ACT residency. See drivers with interstate licences.
- Registering or transferring a vehicle from interstate also happens in person, and the vehicle usually needs an inspection first. If your interstate rego still has time on it, you may be able to claim a refund by surrendering the plates here. See vehicles registered interstate.
- Licence cards and registration documents are posted, not collected, so allow time for delivery.
Utilities and bins
- Water and sewerage are provided by Icon Water, the ACT Government utility.
- Electricity and gas are commonly supplied through ActewAGL, though you can choose other licensed retailers.
- Bins: standard households get a weekly general-waste bin (red lid) and a fortnightly recycling bin (yellow lid), with an optional green-waste bin (lime-green lid) for a fee. Households are also eligible for a free bulky-waste collection each financial year, booked in advance. Details and bin requests are via ACT City Services.
Getting around
Public transport (buses and a light rail line from Gungahlin to Civic) is run by Transport Canberra. Pay using the MyWay+ system, which accepts contactless Visa/Mastercard, a MyWay+ card or single tickets, with a free transfer window between services. Fares and concessions change, so check the current tickets and MyWay+ page. Canberra is also flat and bike-friendly, with an extensive off-road path network.
Healthcare
Public hospitals and free nurse-led Walk-in Centres are run by Canberra Health Services. GPs are private clinics, and whether they bulk-bill varies by clinic.
Where official information lives
The ACT Government publishes a consolidated new-to-Canberra guide on act.gov.au that summarises the key steps. Bookmark act.gov.au, Access Canberra, Transport Canberra and VisitCanberra and you will have most of what a new resident needs.
This article is general information compiled with AI assistance. Rules, fees and timeframes change, so please confirm current details with the official sources linked above before acting.