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What do you think is the worst part about living in Australia? Locals share their confessions

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What do you think is the worst part about living in Australia? Locals share their confessions

  • Maan
  • By Maan
What do you think is the worst part about living in Australia? Locals share their confessions
Locals reveal downsides of living down under. Image source: Pexels/Catarina Sousa | Disclaimer: This is a stock image used for illustrative purposes only and does not depict the actual person, item, or event described.

Australia has always been nicknamed the 'lucky country'.


Yet even in paradise, locals admit life Down Under comes with its frustrations.


Some confessions might make you nod in agreement—or sigh at the irony.





A discussion on a popular Australian living thread recently sparked a flurry of complaints about life in the sunburnt country.


It began when a woman asked fellow locals to share 'the worst part about living [here]'.


'I see a lot of posts about the best things in Australia, but what is your least favourite thing about living [here]?' she wrote.


'Personally, I hate that barely any (non-Australian) musicians come here,' she added.



The most repeated grievance centred on Australia’s geographic isolation.



'It honestly is a long way to go to see the world.'

Anonymous user


'I can't just up and drive to another country,' another user lamented.





For those who travelled internationally for work or to visit family, the distance proved particularly frustrating.


'I travel a lot and couldn't justify any more long haul flights just to get home,' one person admitted.


'[It] was just too much to handle.'


'Australia is in the worst location for people that just wanna go somewhere new and different for the weekend,' another commenter said, noting they had since 'moved to Europe'.





Travel costs from Australia



Economy flights to Europe/US: $1,500-$3,000 return



Business class: $5,000-$11,000 return



Domestic flights can sometimes be cheaper than buses



It takes five hours to fly from Sydney to Perth



Many seniors find long-haul travel increasingly difficult






The inverse issue also surfaced—international visitors were often reluctant to make the journey to Australia.


't's a long way to go for the world to see us,' one user wrote.


'We miss out on so many bands, and when they do come, they only visit three cities.'


Some argued that distance was a double-edged sword—what made Australia isolated also contributed to its appeal.


'The worst thing is also the best thing—we are so far away from so many places,' one person reflected.


The distance ensured a quiet, peaceful, and uncrowded environment, yet it came with its drawbacks.




Several commenters criticised the country's nightlife and cultural offerings.


'In comparison to a lot of other countries, nightlife here is pretty boring and museums are kind of meh,' one wrote.


'People go to work, drive home, and watch tv. There's no community or "Joie de Vivre",' another added.


Financial pressures were another recurring theme, with many noting Australia’s high cost of living.


'Housing cost s***,' one user bluntly stated.


'[T]he housing market is broken here, but I do like the weather,' another wrote.



Did you know?



Housing frustrations vs happiness In 2024, only 22% of Australians were satisfied with their housing situation, while 76% were dissatisfied—illustrating a level of frustration unseen in most wealthy economies [14], yet Australia still ranks in the top 10 happiest countries globally.




'Cost of living is also obscene. Cars, houses, food, utilities, fuel, insurance, coffee, restaurants, and damn near everything else,' a third commenter reflected.


Even the local wildlife drew complaints, with bugs named as a nuisance by several residents.


'Flies, mozzies, spiders, beetles, wasps, and the greatest number of ants I've ever seen,' one person wrote.


'Sydney's cockroach problem (partly caused by the high humidity which is another worst thing about living here) is absolutely awful,' another added.



What This Means For You


Many Australians find their country’s geographic isolation frustrating, making travel abroad lengthy and limiting the number of international visitors who come to see us. The high cost of living and ever-increasing housing pressures add another layer of stress for locals trying to make ends meet.


Major cities are often criticised for underwhelming nightlife and cultural offerings, leaving some feeling there’s less to do compared with overseas. On top of that, Australia’s unique wildlife—including insects and other pests—can create daily annoyances.


These challenges can feel particularly relevant, whether it’s planning family visits overseas, managing finances on a fixed income, or simply wanting a more vibrant social life while navigating the quirks of life Down Under.




Australia’s distance from the rest of the world can feel like both a blessing and a curse—what do you think is the hardest part of living Down Under?

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How about the rancid stench of curry flavoured sweat on public transport?
🤣🤣🤣haven’t caught public transport in over probably going on 40 years I always drove everywhere even in Tasmania,and never use it here now either.🌞
 
I came over from NZ with my two daughters and an ex partner back in 1987 to Perth and have stayed here and wouldn't live anywhere else. Still have 1 daughter here with her family so that makes life perfect. Cost of living here is not great but reckon it is biting everywhere so we just have to make the most of it.
 
Dear member Colette 3799, thankyou for your post. May your dear father's soul rest in peace. I believe that yes, your father would have loved it here with your family. Wishing you many happy blessings. 🙏🦋
Thank you 🤗
 
I tell people I was born in the wrong place. It felt like home here as soon as I got off the plane, and that was just on holiday! i cried all the way back to the UK and when I saw the sign at the airport “Welcome to Manchester” I said to my husband “I don’t want to be here”. We applied to emigrate straight away and have never regretted it. We’ve been here just about 40 years, my husband travels back to visit his 98 yo Mum and his siblings but I have never been back, I really have no desire to. We became citizens as soon as we were able, which was after two years and are proud to be Australian
And now we have Albo allowing immigrants to take out citizenship no sooner they arrive just so he can get the votes. They haven't even lived here long enough to know what the infrastructure is like that is desperately needed before anymore migrants as we need the housing, schools and hospitals and better roads for our people that that are desperate.
 
I got a 1st fleet convict in my family and I took part of in the Bicentennial in 1988 playing a convict landing at Circular Quay on Australia Day and what a time that was and the rest of my family arrived early to mid 1800s from Ireland, Scotland and England. The Scots side were pioneers in the Hunter Valley for example Abermain, Aberdeen, Aberdare and Nth Coast of NSW in that time. Heaps of Angus's in that family going back more than 200 years, last Angus was my Granddad born in Grafton NSW.
Just saying why I like it here in Australia, My family has history here.
That Convict when released help settle around Camden NSW and has a school named after him. One helped John Batman to survey Melbourne, yes blame me. One helped lay the Hunter Valley railways. One perished on the Dunbar shipwreck on the way here to settle. A few help build The Sydney Harbour Bridge which will celebrate in style it's 100th birthday of the opening in 6 something years. Pioneers of the far Nth Coast NSW dairy industry.
Anyway I digress
I say the convicts got the better deal to be shipped here and I think you know why because you cried all the way back to the UK. And to back that up, ages ago I asked an expat Englishman why come here? His reply was England is a nasty place full of nasty people. his words not mine.
Your family history is so interesting. I love hearing about ancestors (mine just seem to be dirt poor who loved to drink and fight lol). We lived next door to a lovely old man not long after we bought our first house here. I was talking to him over the fence and he started telling me about his family history. I ended up getting myself a stool and I sat and listened to him for about three hours, just so interesting. Apparently he was interviewed about his family for the local radio after our chat. I felt privileged to have got a sneak preview.
Where I grew up the people were the salt of the earth, they would do anything for you. They would give you the shirt off their back. These days I think it’s a bit different, as is everywhere, a sign of the times. I am still in touch with many good friends who I grew up with and they haven’t changed. I guess society has changed.
 
High petrol prices even when we produce crude. Why? It makes local driving trips expensive compared to 30 years ago.
America is also a big country but they enjoy visiting different States when petrol prices are 1/2 of what it is downunder.
 
I was hatched in a country hospital and for most of my life i have lived in a regional setting which i love. My sense of relief on returning to our home after holidays is palpable, we are so lucky to live in this country.
I believe that complaining has reached endemic proportions and should be reigned in some manner. Do I complain? Yes, but i have only two……….the amount of vicious crime against people, and political correctness. She / her on official documentation sounds like a donkey with a bad viral condition.
J.Coster ( She / her)
 
If you don't like things in Australia, go where you like it, I love my country and would have it any other way, the only thing I dislike is people complaining about thing.
 
High petrol prices even when we produce crude. Why? It makes local driving trips expensive compared to 30 years ago.
America is also a big country but they enjoy visiting different States when petrol prices are 1/2 of what it is downunder.
In July this year, the average petrol price in the US was US$0.83 while in Australia it was US$1.19.

Hardly half but more like seven tenths.
 
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Living in Perth, so close to my EX.
Yesterday I was at my granddaughter Brooklyn's school book week parade, teachers and kids were dressed up in every book caricature imaginable. Megan my daughter said "Look dad mums over there?' I looked across and saw a lady with grey hair and said "That's not mum!" Megan then said "Dad the two teachers dressed up as witches, in their black capes and spiked hats, one of them is mum!" I laughed my head off! Once as my ex was sweeping the driveway, when I dropped the girls off after my access weekend, when the girls had gone inside the house I said "with the broom in your hand, are you getting ready for a flight?" My ex did not understand what I meant, and when going into the house, asked the girls what did dad mean when he said, am I getting ready for a flight, when sweeping the driveway?" Megan told her the answer and then told me the next access weekend, when I saw the girls. Megan takes after me and has a great sense of humour. My ex has alienated both my daughters, their partners and grandkids, as they have said their mother is a compulsive aggressive, narcissist! So sad that she cannot see it, and is still as bitter and twisted from the day she told me the marriage was over (that I did not see coming)..back in 2000 when Megan was seven and Loren nearly three years old.......
Never let a good story, stop the Truth! Ha! Ha!
 
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