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📍 Melbourne, Victoria

Unit Converter — Melbourne

Free unit converter for Melbourne residents. Local 2025 data including Melbourne property prices, wages and costs.

📍 Melbourne — Local Context 2025

Population: 5.2M  |  Region: Greater Melbourne
Median house price: $850,000  |  State: Victoria

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Unit Converter for Melbourne Residents — 2025

Whether you're in central Melbourne or the surrounding Greater Melbourne area, this tool uses Australian-standard data that applies across the country. Below is Melbourne-specific context to help you get the most accurate results for your local situation.

About Melbourne, Victoria

Melbourne is located in Victoria and is part of the Greater Melbourne area, with a population of approximately 5.2M. The local economy is supported by diverse industry, professional services and retail. The local property market has a median house price of approximately $850,000, with weekly rents averaging $530 for houses.

Cost of Living Context for Melbourne

Melbourne combines world-class liveability with relatively high housing and transport costs.

Local Resources for Melbourne Residents

  • Melbourne area council websites for local rates and services
  • Victoria government services at vic.gov.au
  • Australian Government services at australia.gov.au
  • ATO for tax and super information at ato.gov.au
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does Australia use metric instead of imperial?

Australia converted to metric in the 1970s for international trade alignment, scientific standardisation, and to modernise alongside most other countries. The UK (Australia's historical measurement reference) subsequently moved to metric for most purposes. Today, the US is the only major economy still primarily using imperial for everyday measurements.

Quick Celsius to Fahrenheit mental calculation?

Approximate formula: (°C × 2) + 30 ≈ °F. Example: 25°C ≈ (25×2)+30 = 80°F (exact: 77°F). For cold temperatures: 10°C ≈ 50°F (exact: 50°F — this one's exact!). For Australian everyday use, the approximation is close enough.

Are UK gallons and US gallons the same?

No — they're significantly different volumes. 1 UK (imperial) gallon = 4.546 litres. 1 US gallon = 3.785 litres (about 20% smaller). Australia never officially used gallons — all fuel has been sold in litres since metrication. When old Australian cars quote 'mpg' fuel economy, they typically mean UK mpg.

What is a 'stone' in Australian weight measurement?

A stone is 14 pounds or 6.35 kilograms — an old British imperial unit. It was used in Australia before metrication for body weight. Some older Australians still refer to their weight in stone informally, but medical, sports and official contexts all use kilograms.