Discover our Ready Made Businesses:

Are you a tradie, a baker or a butcher? Are you ready for a change? Are you ready to start your own business?

 Check out our Ready Made Business opportunities in South West Queensland.

 

Our region has a number of towns and while they are not as big as Brisbane or Toowoomba, our region still needs services and there is a chronic shortage of a range of trades. There is approximately $20 million in work for electricians, painters, mechanics, plumbers that is up for grabs in our region. We have some towns that urgently need a butcher or a bakery. So many of our towns have sufficient work to keep a single tradie busy all year round, so all you need to do is show up and the business is yours. If you are seeking a change and an adventure, investigate your boundless opportunities in South West Queensland today!

South West Queensland is quite simply ready-made for enterprise. It’s no wonder that so many small businesses thrive here, with over 4,000 registered in the region.

South West Queensland is the place to start and grow your small business, boasting:

  • Captured markets with high unmet demand

  • Existing retail premises with high-street presence

  • Affordable commercial and residential accommodation

  • Reliable high-speed internet, ready for current and emerging technology

  • Supportive business environment where people help each other to succeed

  • Warm and welcoming communities, great for new and growing families

  • Local councils providing assistance, support and connections to resources and networks

 

See who has already made the move to South West Queensland

 
2021 is kicking off with advance
bookings already made, and plans for extending to weekend evenings with woodfired pizza and tapas for 2022.
— Cristina Zito, Elegant Emu

Elegant Emu (Adavale QLD)

Moving to the region from Byron Bay, in 2018 Cristina Zito started selling various home baked takeaway items from her Adavale premises near Quilpie. By 2020, Elegant Emu was established as a café, specialising in high tea, offering a luxury experience to visitors, and complemented by an online fair-trade handbag business. Elegant Emu shows that remoteness is no barrier to running a boutique business.

In South West Queensland, you can make your business whatever you want to make it, supported by a community that values trust and hard work.
— Bec Beissel, Maranoa Beef

Maranoa Beef (Roma QLD)

In a few short years Maranoa Beef grew from local producer to regional supplier of high-quality meats. Selling hampers of high providence product and growing through word-of-mouth, they tripled their business size in just eighteen months.

South West Queensland is the ideal place to grow our business, where we have the space to innovate in affordable premises and instant access to our distribution networks.
— Albab Khan, Chef’s Choice Charcoal

Chef’s Choice Charcoal (Charleville QLD)

Some of the best charcoal in the world is produced in South West Queensland, from the highly sought-after Gidgee tree wood. Chef’s Choice Charcoal was established by local expert producer Leanne Dierke in partnership with Toowoomba restaurateurs and entrepreneurs Albab and Adnun Khan. The first tenants in Charleville’s new $1m industrial precinct, Chef’s Choice has developed their own bespoke process that produces the highest quality charcoal with a range of value-add products for distribution across Australia and expanding to South East Asia.

There’s endless opportunity here for the tourism industry, with unmet demand for larger tour groups and great potential for more product that taps into health and wellness.
— Judy Roberts, Manager, Warrego Riverside Tourist Park

Warrego Riverside Tourist Park (Cunnamulla QLD)

Drawn to the untapped potential of an idyllic spot by the water, Warrego Riverside Tourist Park was established by Judy Roberts nearly ten years ago. Covering an area of 32 acres, the park caters for caravaners and campers with 30 powered sites and endless space by the side of the river.

A typical season sees the park welcoming 3,500 vans with many returning year on year. The favoured spot is now a destination in its own right with scores of loyal visitors making it their end point on epic trips from either the east or the west.

We have been so fortunate to have such interesting and special professional and personal opportunities and experiences since living here, which I honestly believe we would not have had in our old ‘big city’ lives.
— Bec Lomman, Founder, Arcadian Communications

Arcadian Communications (St. George QLD)

Committed to rural and regional Australia, Arcadian Communications is a St George based corporate communications, research, engagement and strategy agency. Working with all levels of government and rural and regional corporations, Arcadian is committed to supporting the development and long-term sustainability of rural and regional Australia.

Founder Bec Lomman settled in St George in 2012, and quickly found opportunities for a range of small business ideas before establishing Arcadian in 2013. Bec felt that living in a remote rural community shouldn’t be a barrier to establishing a thriving professional services business and is now reaping the benefits of successfully working with clients across Queensland while enjoying all the lifestyle benefits of South West Queensland.

 

Towns:

 
ce0616b9c7e8d1a5b2926b11c23c6cff_v2.jpg

St George

Population: 3,048

As the principal town in the Shire of Balonne, St George is the administrative and commercial centre. Located on the picturesque Balonne River, the town boasts a wealth of small businesses that service the local population, the broader region and the busy tourism market.

 
Dirranbandi_Main-Street.jpg

Dirranbandi

Population: 640

On the border with New South Wales, Dirranbandi is a small country town surrounded by booming agriculture and adjacent to the largest irrigated cotton farm in the southern hemisphere.

 
IMG_6146.jpg

Thargomindah

Population: 270

The administrative centre for the Shire of Bulloo, Thargomindah boasts a cluster of small businesses that service the local population as well as the various mining camps in the region.

 
1H5A8148.JPG

Roma

Population: 6,848

With a cosmopolitan feel, and boutique specialty retailers, cafes and restaurants, Roma is the place where country meets outback.

 
Screen Shot 2021-07-07 at 10.15.42 am.png

Injune

Population: 461

Small businesses are what makes Injune tick, from accommodation to cafes, hardware to logistics, this is a great place to set up shop.

 
IMG_5662.jpg

Charleville

Population: 3,335

The largest town in the Murweh Shire, Charleville is centred around its heritage buildings and cluster of thriving small businesses.

 
IMG_6435_LR.jpg

Cunnamulla

Population: 1,140

Located on the mighty Warrego river, Cunnamulla is the bustling focal point of the Paroo Shire, with accommodation, services, administration and small business clustered together.

 
IMG_6329.jpg

Eulo

Population: 95

Known for abundant local produce equalled by community spirit, Eulo is also a hub for the local opal industry.

 
IMG_5932 2.jpg

Quilpie

Population: 595

Quilpie town is the heart of the shire, where administration and business is centred, including post office, pubs, accommodation, hardware and freight.

 
Adavale-Pub-scaled.jpg

Adavale

Population: 93

Adavale within the Quilpie Shire is a small town that punches above its weight, in large part with its role as gateway to the spectacular Hell Hole Gorge National Park.