Check noise sources before you buy
The open home was on a Tuesday at 10am. The pub next door opens at midnight on Saturdays.
Open homes are staged at the quietest time of the week. Nobody schedules them on a Friday night when the bar across the road has live music, or on a Saturday morning when the construction site next door starts at 7am.
477 licensed venues are tracked across Newcastle — pubs, clubs, restaurants, bottle shops, late-night food outlets. Each with specific trading hours that determine whether your new street is peaceful at 11pm or just getting started.
Our report maps every licensed venue within 500m of your address, shows their approved trading hours, estimates road traffic noise in dB(A) using TfNSW data, checks rail line proximity, and flags active DAs that could bring construction noise for the next 2–5 years.
Noise you can't hear at an open home
Pubs, clubs, and bars with trading hours past midnight. The noise carries further than you'd think.
Classified roads near your address with estimated dB(A) noise levels from TfNSW traffic counts. The constant hum you stop noticing at an open home.
Approved DAs mean future building works — potentially years of early morning starts and heavy machinery.
Live music, outdoor dining, and event spaces. Great to visit — different when it's your bedroom wall.
Proximity to rail lines and stations — distance impacts noise, vibration, and early morning services.
What the noise section covers
- ✓ Licensed venues within 500m — Every pub, club, restaurant, and bottle shop — mapped with distance and trading hours
- ✓ Venue classification — Distinguishes a quiet restaurant from a late-night club so you know what the noise profile looks like
- ✓ Road & traffic noise — Nearby road classifications with estimated dB(A) noise levels using TfNSW traffic volume data
- ✓ Rail proximity — Distance to nearest rail station and line — impacts noise, vibration, and early morning disruption
- ✓ Active construction — DAs in the pipeline that mean future building noise near your address
- ✓ Gentrification signals — Venue openings and closings that indicate whether the nightlife is growing or declining
Hear what the neighbours already know
Enter any Newcastle address and see every noise source within 500m. Licensed venues, trading hours, road traffic levels, rail proximity, and the construction pipeline.
Try: 1 Union Street, Wickham
Frequently asked questions
How many licensed venues are tracked?
477 licensed venues across Newcastle — pubs, clubs, restaurants, bottle shops, and late-night food outlets. Each mapped with their approved trading hours.
Why does venue data matter for property buyers?
Licensed venues are the biggest source of nighttime noise in residential areas. A pub with 3am trading 50m away affects your daily life in ways a property listing never mentions. Open homes happen on quiet mornings — the venue schedule tells you what evenings sound like.
Does the report cover construction noise?
Yes. Active DAs in the pipeline mean future construction — early morning starts, heavy machinery, and deliveries. We flag every DA within 500m so you know what building works could be coming.
Can I check noise sources before attending an open home?
Yes. Enter any Newcastle address to see licensed venues, construction pipeline, and commercial activity within 500m. Useful context before you even visit.