
Banksmeadow NSW 2019
Suburb summary
Banksmeadow, NSW 2019 is a small Sydney suburb in the St George region with an industrial and logistics character. Popular searches like Banksmeadow NSW suburb profile, Banksmeadow property market, and Banksmeadow commute highlight its practical location: public transport commute to the Sydney CBD averages 50 minutes, or 15 minutes by car. The suburb has many bus services, nearby beach access, 8.20% canopy cover, a median age of 46, and a safety rating of 4/5. In the past 6 months, recorded house sales data showed 1 sale with a median price of $9.50M.
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
$994k
Derived from sales
House sales
8
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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1 popular apartments in Banksmeadow NSW 2019
Demographic info
Median age
33 years
Renters
60%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Banksmeadow NSW 2019: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Banksmeadow NSW 2019 a good suburb for families?
Banksmeadow NSW 2019 is a mixed rather than strong option for families. The suburb’s safety rating sits at 4 out of 5, which is a positive starting point for buyers thinking about day-to-day comfort, and the primary school rating is also strong at 5 out of 5. That said, the local demographic profile is unusual for a typical family-friendly suburb. Children aged 0 to 4 make up 23.1% of residents, but there is effectively no 5 to 14 age group recorded, and the housing mix does not show a clear base of established family homes. Average household size is also recorded at 0, so this is not reading like a conventional residential family area. For buyers asking whether Banksmeadow is good for kids, the answer is really only for a narrow type of household that values safety and access over classic suburban family atmosphere.
What is it like to live in Banksmeadow NSW 2019?
Living in Banksmeadow NSW 2019 feels urban, practical and heavily shaped by industrial surroundings rather than village-style suburb life. The suburb character is described as industrial and logistics-led, and that fits with the broader picture: environmental features are urban and built-up, tree canopy is low at 8.2%, walkability is 2 out of 5, retail is 2 out of 5, and culture is 1 out of 5. In everyday terms, Banksmeadow is not the kind of suburb buyers choose for café strips, leafy streets or a strong local lifestyle scene. The upside is that it can suit buyers who want a straightforward, functional location close to major employment zones and not far from the coast, with nearby beach access adding some lifestyle relief. The trade-off is that living in Banksmeadow is likely to feel more practical than charming, and less convenient on foot than many inner-city buyers expect.
Is Banksmeadow NSW 2019 well connected for commuting?
Banksmeadow NSW 2019 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but the transport picture is mixed. There is no train, metro, light rail or ferry service directly in the suburb, so buyers relying on rail-based public transport should be aware that the area is not served in the same way as more established commuter suburbs. What Banksmeadow does have is many bus services, and the average commute is about 50 minutes by public transport versus around 15 minutes by car to the Sydney CBD. That tells you a lot: driving is clearly the easier option here, especially for people working across the airport, port, south-east industrial belt or broader eastern suburbs. For commuters who prefer one-seat train access into the city, Banksmeadow will feel less convenient. For buyers comfortable with buses and driving, though, it remains workable and better connected than the lack of rail might first suggest.
Who does Banksmeadow NSW 2019 suit best?
Banksmeadow NSW 2019 suits best buyers who want a functional urban location and who are comfortable with a suburb that feels more work-focused than lifestyle-led. The resident profile leans older, with a median age of 46, and the top occupation category is professionals at 20%. Median personal income is $1,031 per week, which suggests a fairly moderate income profile rather than a prestige-market demographic. The suburb does not show a clear dominant housing mix of either classic family houses or apartment-led living, and rental share is recorded at 0%, so it reads as an unusual, highly specific market rather than a broad mainstream buyer destination. In practical terms, Banksmeadow may appeal to buyers who value proximity to employment hubs, major roads and the south-east corridor. It is likely to suit buyers seeking a classic family-suburban feel, walk-to-everything convenience, or a stronger neighbourhood atmosphere less well.
What are the pros and cons of living in Banksmeadow NSW 2019?
The main trade-off in Banksmeadow NSW 2019 is simple: you get practical positioning and decent safety, but you give up a lot of lifestyle texture and transport variety. On the positive side, Banksmeadow has a safety rating of 4 out of 5, many bus services, nearby beach access, and a short 15-minute average drive to the Sydney CBD, which is strong by Sydney standards. Those features can make it appealing to buyers who prioritise access to work, the airport-port corridor, or fast road connections. The compromise is that walkability and retail are both just 2 out of 5, culture is 1 out of 5, and there is no train, metro, light rail or ferry in the suburb. Tree canopy is also low, so it is not a leafy setting. Buyers who want a practical base may see value here, while buyers chasing atmosphere, greenery or easy rail commuting may feel the trade-off more sharply.
What are property prices like in Banksmeadow NSW 2019?
Property prices in Banksmeadow NSW 2019 look expensive at the house level, but the recent sales evidence is extremely limited. In the last six months, the recorded suburb-level history shows just one house sale, with a median and average price of $9.5 million. That clearly places the suburb in premium territory for that small sample, but buyers should be careful not to treat one sale as a full picture of the local market. There is no recent apartment sales result in the current suburb history, so it is hard to draw a broader pricing range across different property types. In practical terms, buying property in Banksmeadow may require a very substantial budget if you are targeting the kind of house that has traded recently. The trade-off is that a high price point here may reflect scarce stock or highly specific properties rather than a deep, broad-based prestige market.
