Bangor NSW 2234 property reports

Bangor NSW 2234

Suburb

Suburb summary

Bangor, NSW 2234 is a residential suburb in Sydney’s Sutherland Shire, known for bushland and National Park adjacency. It has 5,568 residents, a median age of 42, average household size of 3, and 38.02% tree canopy cover. Housing is dominated by separate houses, with 1,567 houses or 96% of dwellings, versus 57 apartments or 3%. Median weekly personal income is $848 and family income is $2,418. Local schools rate 5/5 for both primary and secondary, safety is 4/5, and train access is available on the T4 line. In the past 6 months, Bangor house prices had a median of $1.735M across 24 sales.

Pocket Price Distribution

See how house prices vary across different parts of the suburb, and where this pocket sits in the local market.

Suburb median

$1.7M

Derived from sales

House sales

49

In past 12 months

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Pocket Price Map

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Demographic info

Median age

43 years

Renters

10%

Top 3 occupations

Managers20%
Professionals20%
Clerical and Administrative Workers20%

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Living in Bangor NSW 2234: Suburb Profile & FAQs

Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.

Is Bangor NSW 2234 a good suburb for families?

Bangor NSW 2234 is a strong suburb for families, especially buyers looking for a house-based area with solid schooling and a more settled suburban feel. The schooling indicators are a standout here, with both primary and secondary education rated 10 out of 10, and the suburb’s safety score of 4 out of 5 adds further reassurance for family buyers thinking about day-to-day livability. Bangor also looks family-oriented in its housing mix: 96% of homes are separate houses and only 3% are apartments, which usually means more private outdoor space and a less dense streetscape. Children are clearly part of the local picture too, with 6.3% of residents aged 0 to 4 and 12.2% aged 5 to 14, while the average household size of 3 supports that family pattern. The trade-off is that Bangor may not suit buyers wanting a cheaper entry point or a more urban, walkable lifestyle, because the suburb is predominantly house-based and that usually comes with a higher budget.

What is it like to live in Bangor NSW 2234?

Living in Bangor NSW 2234 feels calm, established and distinctly suburban, with a strong bushland edge rather than an urban village atmosphere. Bangor sits in the Sutherland Shire and is described as a residential suburb with bushland and national park adjacency, which helps explain its appealing 38.02% canopy cover and a lifestyle that should feel greener than many built-up Sydney locations. For buyers who value space, quieter streets and a more low-rise environment, Bangor has a lot going for it. At the same time, this is not a high-energy, walk-everywhere suburb. Walkability is 2 out of 5, retail is 3 out of 5 and culture is 2 out of 5, so daily life is likely to be more car-oriented and practical than vibrant or highly convenient. In plain terms, Bangor suits buyers who want a peaceful home base near natural surroundings, but it may feel a bit too quiet for those chasing café density, nightlife or easy pedestrian access to everything.

Is Bangor NSW 2234 well connected for commuting?

Bangor NSW 2234 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s most transport-rich suburbs. Train access is nearby rather than in the suburb itself, with the T4 line serving the broader area, and public transport travel to the Sydney CBD averages about 50 minutes. Driving is faster at around 35 minutes on average, which suggests Bangor works better for buyers who are comfortable using a car for at least part of their routine. Bus services are limited, there is no metro, no light rail and no ferry, so the transport picture is functional rather than flexible. For many Sutherland Shire buyers that trade-off will feel acceptable because Bangor offers a quieter residential setting in return. Still, if your priority is fast public transport, multiple mode choices or a simple station walk, Bangor may feel less convenient than suburbs built around stronger rail or bus infrastructure.

Who does Bangor NSW 2234 suit best?

Bangor NSW 2234 suits family buyers, established upgraders and professional households who want space, stability and a traditional house suburb in the Sutherland Shire. The housing profile is very clear: 96% separate houses and only 3% apartments, so Bangor is naturally better aligned with buyers looking for larger homes rather than compact, high-density living. It also appears relatively tightly held, with only 6.9% of homes rented, which usually points to a more owner-occupied feel. The resident profile reinforces that positioning. Professionals make up 24.1% of occupations, managers 15.6%, and managers plus professionals together account for 39.7% of residents. Median weekly family income is $2,418 and the median age is 42, which suggests a mature, established community rather than a youthful renter market. The limitation is that Bangor may suit first-home buyers or apartment-focused investors less well, because the suburb’s dominant housing format and pricing lean more toward family houses than lower-entry stock.

What are the pros and cons of living in Bangor NSW 2234?

The main trade-off in Bangor NSW 2234 is simple: you get space, schooling and a calmer bushland-backed setting, but you give up some convenience and transport depth. On the plus side, Bangor is clearly attractive for buyers who value a suburban family environment. Safety is 4 out of 5, tree canopy is a healthy 38.02%, and the suburb is overwhelmingly made up of separate houses, which supports a spacious, low-density feel. The nearby T4 train line also means Bangor is not cut off from the rest of Sydney. On the other hand, walkability is only 2 out of 5, culture is 2 out of 5, bus services are limited, and there is no metro, light rail or ferry option. That means errands, commuting and social life may involve more driving and planning than in denser inner-city areas. For buyers wanting room, schools and a more settled pace, that compromise may be worthwhile; for highly urban buyers, it may matter more.

What are property prices like in Bangor NSW 2234?

Property prices in Bangor NSW 2234 look expensive by normal buyer expectations, particularly for houses, because this is a predominantly house-led suburb with limited lower-entry stock. In the past six months, recorded house sales in Bangor had a median price of $1.78 million, with 21 sales and a middle range that broadly ran from about $1.64 million at the 25th percentile to $1.94 million at the 75th percentile. That tells buyers the local market is centred firmly in established family-house territory rather than entry-level Sydney buying. Apartment data is much thinner, with only 4 sales, but the median recorded apartment price was $1.41 million, which suggests units here are not necessarily cheap alternatives. In practical terms, buying property in Bangor usually means paying for house-oriented living, stronger schools and a quieter Sutherland Shire setting. The trade-off is budget pressure: buyers may need to spend more here than in denser suburbs that offer smaller dwellings and a lower land component.