Sponsored Article

1. The 2026 “Price Check” Comparison

Recent March 2026 data shows that while baseline prices are higher in the CBD, student-specific discounts actually level the playing field.

CategoryCity Campus (CBD)Bundoora CampusThe Verdict
Standard Coffee$5.00 – $6.50$4.50 – $5.50Bundoora is ~15% cheaper for caffeine.
Hot Lunch (Retail)$14.00 – $18.00$11.00 – $15.00Bundoora wins on “standard” retail price.
Student “Combo”$9.50 – $12.00$10.00 – $13.00City Wins. High competition drives $10 deals.
Supermarket AccessMetro/Local (Premium)Full-scale Coles/AldiBundoora wins for grocery shoppers.



2. The City Strategy: The “15-Minute Radius” Rule

The reason City students think it’s more expensive is that they stay within the Bowen Street/Swanston Street bubble. In 2026, the real savings are found exactly 10–15 minutes away:

  • The “Concession” King: Crossways (Swanston St) still offers its famous $7.50 student concession meal (all-you-can-eat). This is cheaper than any retail meal at Bundoora.
  • The QV Pivot: While Melbourne Central is expensive, the Breadtop and Goz City in QV offer $4–$9 “handheld” lunches that undercut campus cafes.
  • The Oxford Scholar Hack: As RMIT’s official pub (Bldg 81), students get 15% off. In March 2026, their “Student Special” lunch sits at $18.00—comparable to a standard Bundoora pub meal but with a higher “CBD quality” finish.



3. The Bundoora Advantage: The “Precinct” Effect

Bundoora’s price advantage comes from the Uni Hill Town Centre, a 10-minute walk from the West campus.

  • Volume Pricing: Unlike the City “Express” supermarkets, the Bundoora Coles and nearby Aldi allow for bulk buying.
  • The Burger Wars: Bundoora has a high density of sub-$11 burger spots (Fat Staks, PattySmiths). Because rent is lower than the CBD, these businesses can offer “student combos” that include chips and a drink for the price of a City burger alone.



4. 2026 Retail “Cheat Sheet”

  • City Campus (Building 10): J&G Taiwanese Fried Chicken offers a 5% discount for RMIT IDs. It’s the cheapest “hot protein” snack on the Swanston strip this March.
  • Bundoora East (Building 254): Brew Labs (student-run) is currently the cheapest coffee on any RMIT campus, often undercutting the Bundoora West cafes by $0.50.
  • Vending 2.0: The Flying Turtle machines (City/Bundoora/Brunswick) are price-locked across all campuses. If you want a $6.00 Matcha Latte, it costs exactly the same in the CBD as it does in the suburbs.
TT Ads

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *