Meet your neighbours — the app built around your suburb

Be honest: how many of the people on your street could you name? For most of us these days it's one or two, if that. You wave at the bloke with the caravan, you know the dog before you know the owner, and that's about it. When you own the place, that's worth changing.

Updated 8 July 2026 · Australia

There was a time when you knew everyone on the street — who to ask for a hand shifting a fridge, whose kids played with yours, who'd keep an eye on the place while you were away. Somewhere along the way that quietly disappeared. We drive into the garage, the door rolls down, and that's the last anyone sees of us until morning. Doorstep exists to bring a bit of that back, one suburb at a time.

Why knowing your neighbours matters more when you own the place

When you're renting, the neighbours are a temporary thing — you'll probably move before you ever really meet them. But when you've bought the place, you're not going anywhere for a while. These are the people you'll live alongside for years. That changes the maths.

There are the practical reasons, and they're not small ones:

None of this happens by accident anymore. You have to make the first move, and that's exactly the bit most of us find awkward. Doorstep is built to make that first move feel normal.

One member, one suburb — so you only see genuine locals

Most social and dating apps drop a pin somewhere near you and then show you people from three suburbs over, the next town, or wherever the algorithm feels like reaching that day. That's no good for getting to know your actual street.

Doorstep anchors every member to a single suburb — the one they actually live in. When you open the app, you're seeing the people who share your postcode, your shops, your park, your traffic. Not a stranger 40 kilometres away you'll never bump into. Genuine locals, the ones you'd actually run into at the servo or the school gate.

That anchoring is the whole point. It's what turns "an app full of strangers" into "the people on my street."

The suburb community board

At the heart of Doorstep is your suburb's community board — a shared noticeboard just for people who live where you live. It's the digital version of the corkboard at the local shops, except everyone on it is a verified local.

It's for the everyday stuff that makes a street feel like a neighbourhood:

It's low-key and useful. No outrage, no lost-cat panic threads that never end — just neighbours being neighbours.

A wave for friends, not just dating

Doorstep started as a dating app for homeowners, but not everyone who moves into a suburb is looking for a partner. Plenty just want to know the people around them. So alongside the usual way to show interest, there's a wave.

A wave says "g'day, neighbour" without saying anything romantic. It's the friendly, no-pressure option — for finding mates, a reno buddy, a walking partner, or just someone on the street you can nod to and mean it. You choose which you're open to, and the people you meet know exactly where they stand. No mixed signals, no awkwardness.

The fair-go People Map

Here's the bit we're proudest of. Most apps turn meeting people into a beauty contest — best photo wins, everyone else scrolls past. That's a rotten way to meet the folks on your own street.

So Doorstep's People Map gives everyone a fair go. Every local shows up as an identical, neutral pin on the map of your suburb — same shape, same look, no one bumped to the top for having a better camera. When you focus on a pin you do get to see them — but that's the very moment you decide how to reach out: a wave, a knock, or a ring. There's no ranked grid of faces to scroll, so you're weighing the whole person, not just a headshot.

It's a small design choice that changes everything. You meet your neighbours the way you would in real life — by who they are, not by a headshot.

Homeowners only — settled locals, not transient

Doorstep is for Australian homeowners, and that's deliberate. When you've bought in, you're staying. You're invested in the street, the suburb, the way the place feels. You're not moving on in six months.

That means the people you meet on Doorstep are settled locals at a similar stage of life — folks who care about the same fence, the same council, the same local. It's a community of people who've chosen to be where they are, not a rotating cast passing through. That's what makes it worth getting to know them.

Who it's for

Doorstep is for Australian homeowners who want to actually know their suburb — the neighbours, the good tradies, the reno buddy two doors down.

If you've got the keys, you'd rather be home than at the airport, and you reckon a street's better when people know each other — this one's for you.

Get to know the people on your street

Doorstep anchors you to your own suburb — meet genuine locals, swap tradie tips, find a reno buddy, or just put some names to the faces on your street.

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