Doorstep vs Nextdoor

Both are local, Australian apps — but they're built for two different jobs. One is a neighbourhood noticeboard. The other actually connects you with the homeowners near you. A straight comparison, no hype.

Updated 8 July 2026 · Australia

Same neighbourhood, different jobs

Doorstep and Nextdoor both live in your local area, so it's easy to assume they do the same thing. They don't. Nextdoor is a noticeboard — it's for news, alerts, recommendations and buying and selling. Doorstep is built to actually connect you with the people nearby: to make friends and to date, suburb by suburb.

  Doorstep Nextdoor
Who it's for Australian homeowners — verified, suburb-anchored, looking to connect. The general public in a local area — residents, renters, businesses.
Main purpose Meeting people near you — making friends and dating — plus a community board. Neighbourhood noticeboard: local news, alerts, marketplace, recommendations.
How you connect Wave to make friends, knock or ring to date; message once it's mutual. Public posts, comments and group threads to the whole area.
Verified homeowners Yes — Doorstep is homeowners-only by design. No — open to the broad general public in the area.
Dating / making friends Yes — that's the whole point. Friends or dating, your choice. No — it's not built for meeting people one-to-one.
Privacy of profile Blurred photos on the People Map until you act — a fair-go design that puts people, not looks, first. Real-name, public profile visible to your whole neighbourhood.
Where it lives Australia, suburb by suburb. Australia (and globally), by neighbourhood.

What Nextdoor is for

Nextdoor is a neighbourhood noticeboard, and a good one. It's where you find a recommendation for a plumber, hear about a break-in two streets over, sell an old couch, or ask if anyone's seen a lost dog. The audience is broad — anyone in the area, homeowner or renter, resident or local business.

What it isn't built for is meeting people one-to-one. There's no real way to say "I'd like to be friends" or "I'd like to take you for a coffee." It's a public feed, not a way to connect. That's not a flaw — it's simply a different job.

What Doorstep is for

Doorstep is homeowners-only and suburb-anchored, and it's built to actually connect people. You wave to make friends, or knock or ring if you'd like to date — and once it's mutual, you can message. There's a community board too, so you still get the local, neighbourly side. But the core of it is people, not posts.

Because it's verified homeowners only, you're meeting people at a similar stage of life — settled, local, likely to stick around. And the People Map shows neutral pins rather than a grid of faces — you see someone at the moment you choose to reach out, so it's people-first, not looks-first — a fair go for everyone in the suburb.

The honest difference

It comes down to what you actually want to do. If you want to know what's happening in your area — the local news, the marketplace, the alerts — Nextdoor is the tool for that. If you want to meet the people who live near you, whether that's new friends or a partner, that's what Doorstep is built to do.

They can happily sit side by side on your phone. One keeps you informed about the neighbourhood; the other helps you become part of it.

The verdict

Choose Nextdoor for neighbourhood news, alerts, recommendations and the local marketplace — the noticeboard for your area.

Choose Doorstep to actually meet the homeowners near you — to make friends or to date, suburb by suburb.

Meet the homeowners near you

Doorstep is homeowners-only and built to connect people. Wave to make friends, knock or ring to date, and find locals who get it — suburb by suburb.

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