Property Negotiation Service in St Kilda SA 5110

Are you buying or selling in St Kilda? iREC provides an independent property negotiation service to help buyers secure homes without overpaying, and sellers achieve stronger results. Having an expert negotiator on your side ensures you make the right moves in St Kilda

👉 Backed by extensive expertise iREC offers negotiation support tailored to the St Kilda property market.


Why Use a Property Negotiation Service in St Kilda?

  • Level the playing field – A skilled negotiator ensures you don’t overpay as a buyer and that you maximise value as a seller.

  • Independent advice – Unlike real estate agents, who represent one side of the deal, a negotiation service works solely in your best interest.

  • Maximise outcomes – For sellers in St Kilda, that might mean thousands more at sale. For buyers in St Kilda, it could mean securing your dream property without stretching beyond your budget.

  • Local negotiation expertise- helps you understand where you can push harder—or when it’s smarter to compromise.


How iREC Helps Buyers in St Kilda

  • Assessing fair market value before you make an offer.

  • Handling negotiations with real estate agents.

  • Preventing emotional decisions that lead to overpaying.


How iREC Helps Sellers in St Kilda

  • Comparing multiple agent proposals.

  • Negotiating lower commission fees while ensuring strong sales campaigns.

  • Protecting your bottom line during buyer offers.


Looking beyond St Kilda? See our full Property Negotiation Service SA page for other regions we cover.


Ready to buy or sell in St Kilda?

Get in touch with iREC today for independent property negotiation advice that protects your interests.

👉 Contact Us


About St Kilda (SA 5110)

St Kilda on the seaside has a small number of houses and a 2006 population of 246. There is a single connecting road to the rest of Adelaide which, where the road enters the suburb's residential area, is surrounded by salt crystallisation lagoons used in the manufacture of soda ash. The inhabited section of the suburb occupies less than 100 hectares along the seafront, with the remainder used for salt lagoons and also settlement ponds of nearby Bolivar sewage treatment works.

What was originally a seaside town was named by John Harvey, the founder of nearby Salisbury, as it reminded him of St Kilda in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland with its similar abundance of birdlife. St Kilda is an internationally recognised bird watching area with over 100 species of birds feeding in and around the mudflats, salt Lagoons, mangroves and seagrass beds. The suburb is home to a number of tourist attractions, including an adventure playground, tram museum, mangrove forest walk and an abundance of birdlife.

The suburb was originally three low lying islands that were covered in shell grit and saltbush and surrounded by mangrove and samphire swamps. Fishermen had established huts on the islands by 1865 and by 1873 there were 13 huts and a boathouse recorded when the area was surveyed by Thomas Evans. By the 1890s people were visiting the islands attracted to the supposed curative properties of the mangrove mud, using the beach for bathing and fishing for crabs.

St Kilda was proclaimed a town on 31 July 1893 with sales of the first allotments made on the same day. In 1886 it became part of the Munno Para West District Council area, moving to the district of Salisbury on 1 July 1933 along with most of the Munno Para West area. The islands were extensively modified after floods in 1948 and 1957 which cut off St Kilda from the rest of Adelaide. Salisbury council began building up the area, expanding seawalls and reclaiming additional land by dumping of earth spoil.

The St Kilda Hotel, built out of limestone from east of what is now Elizabeth, opened in 1898 with Matthias Lucas as the first publican and remains the suburb's only hotel. A school opened in October 1902, where the tram museum is now sited, admitting students in November of the same year. The school was closed from 1917 to 1924 and finally closed permanently in 1949 with students moving to Salisbury North Primary School and the building eventually being used at Virginia Primary School. In 1924 a telegraph office opened in Shell Street and, due to the suburb of St Kilda in Melbourne having the same name, the post office service requested that the name be changed. Over some local objections the name was changed to Moilong (a Kaurna word for Where the tide comes in) but this was reversed after local protests. Moilong Telegraph Office opened in 1924, was upgraded to a post office in 1945, renamed Saint Kilda in 1965 and closed in 1974.

St Kilda's population has never been large with 50 non-permanent residents counted in the 1901 census, 68 (including 20 permanent) in 1911, 30 total residents in 1933, 80 in 2002 and increasing to 246 by 2006.


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