The offering, comprising Lots 54, 55 and 56 Indian Ocean Drive, Arrowsmith WA, spans 2,709 hectares across three contiguous titles approximately 110 kilometres south of Geraldton and is being marketed by RWC WA in conjunction with Ray White Rural.

The vacant holding is being offered for sale via Expressions of Interest closing 2 July 2026.

Located within the Arrowsmith corridor, the property sits amid one of the State’s most active concentrations of critical minerals, energy and industrial infrastructure investment, with nearby activity linked to silica sand, rare earths, onshore gas and renewable hydrogen projects.

Brett Wilkins from RWC WA said the scale and strategic positioning of the landholding made it a highly unusual offering in the current market.

“This is a genuinely scarce asset,” Mr Wilkins said. “Contiguous freehold land of this scale with direct Indian Ocean Drive frontage and proximity to major resources and energy projects is exceptionally difficult to replicate in Western Australia.”

“What makes the property particularly compelling is the breadth of potential use cases. It’s not a single-theme acquisition, it has relevance across critical minerals, energy transition infrastructure, carbon projects, tourism and long-term landbanking.”

The property includes approximately 25 kilometres of connectivity to Brand Highway via Indian Ocean Drive and sits within the Arrowsmith Groundwater Area, which overlays the Yarragadee and Parmelia aquifers.

Lot 55 also carries a Special Use (Tourism) zoning overlay, creating potential for future tourism or accommodation-based development along the coastal corridor.

According to the agents, the campaign is expected to attract interest from domestic and offshore institutional groups, neighbouring resource proponents, carbon project developers and high-net-worth investors seeking strategic exposure to the Mid West region.

Andrew Woodley-Page from RWC WA said the timing of the campaign coincided with accelerating investment across the broader Mid West.

“The Mid West has become a focal point for Western Australia’s next wave of industrial and energy investment,” Mr Woodley-Page said.

“Projects tied to rare earths processing, silica exports, gas production and hydrogen development are driving significant capital into the region, and strategically located land is becoming increasingly tightly held.”

“Assets that can support logistics, workforce accommodation, environmental offsets, water access or future infrastructure are drawing much stronger attention than they were even a few years ago.”

The property has been held by the same long-term Western Australian private owner since 2017 and remains largely undeveloped.

Hugh Ness from Ray White Rural WA said the holding’s optionality distinguished it from more traditional rural assets.

“Most large rural holdings typically align to one primary use,” Mr Ness said.

“In this case, there are multiple parallel opportunities, from carbon farming and pastoral pursuits through to tourism development and strategic landbanking adjacent to major industrial activity.”

“That level of flexibility is rare, particularly on a contiguous coastal holding of this scale.”

The offering, comprising Lots 54, 55 and 56 Indian Ocean Drive, Arrowsmith WA, spans 2,709 hectares across three contiguous titles approximately 110 kilometres south of Geraldton and is being marketed by RWC WA in conjunction with Ray White Rural.

The vacant holding is being offered for sale via Expressions of Interest closing 2 July 2026.

Located within the Arrowsmith corridor, the property sits amid one of the State’s most active concentrations of critical minerals, energy and industrial infrastructure investment, with nearby activity linked to silica sand, rare earths, onshore gas and renewable hydrogen projects.

Brett Wilkins from RWC WA said the scale and strategic positioning of the landholding made it a highly unusual offering in the current market.

“This is a genuinely scarce asset,” Mr Wilkins said. “Contiguous freehold land of this scale with direct Indian Ocean Drive frontage and proximity to major resources and energy projects is exceptionally difficult to replicate in Western Australia.”

“What makes the property particularly compelling is the breadth of potential use cases. It’s not a single-theme acquisition, it has relevance across critical minerals, energy transition infrastructure, carbon projects, tourism and long-term landbanking.”

The property includes approximately 25 kilometres of connectivity to Brand Highway via Indian Ocean Drive and sits within the Arrowsmith Groundwater Area, which overlays the Yarragadee and Parmelia aquifers.

Lot 55 also carries a Special Use (Tourism) zoning overlay, creating potential for future tourism or accommodation-based development along the coastal corridor.

According to the agents, the campaign is expected to attract interest from domestic and offshore institutional groups, neighbouring resource proponents, carbon project developers and high-net-worth investors seeking strategic exposure to the Mid West region.

Andrew Woodley-Page from RWC WA said the timing of the campaign coincided with accelerating investment across the broader Mid West.

“The Mid West has become a focal point for Western Australia’s next wave of industrial and energy investment,” Mr Woodley-Page said.

“Projects tied to rare earths processing, silica exports, gas production and hydrogen development are driving significant capital into the region, and strategically located land is becoming increasingly tightly held.”

“Assets that can support logistics, workforce accommodation, environmental offsets, water access or future infrastructure are drawing much stronger attention than they were even a few years ago.”

The property has been held by the same long-term Western Australian private owner since 2017 and remains largely undeveloped.

Hugh Ness from Ray White Rural WA said the holding’s optionality distinguished it from more traditional rural assets.

“Most large rural holdings typically align to one primary use,” Mr Ness said.

“In this case, there are multiple parallel opportunities, from carbon farming and pastoral pursuits through to tourism development and strategic landbanking adjacent to major industrial activity.”

“That level of flexibility is rare, particularly on a contiguous coastal holding of this scale.”

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