
Bardia NSW 2565
Suburb summary
Bardia, NSW 2565 is a South West Sydney suburb in the Macarthur region known as a new residential estate. Popular with home buyers and families searching Bardia property, Bardia real estate, and houses for sale in Bardia, it has a population of 1,602, median age 29, average household size 3.3, and median weekly family income of $2,150. Housing is entirely separate houses in the locality data. In the past 6 months, Bardia recorded 37 house sales with a median price of $1.18M. Public transport commute to Sydney CBD is 65 minutes, driving is 40 minutes. Primary school rating is 4/5.
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
$1M
Derived from sales
House sales
103
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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174 popular houses in Bardia NSW 2565
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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2 popular apartments in Bardia NSW 2565
Demographic info
Median age
30 years
Renters
30%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Bardia NSW 2565: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Bardia NSW 2565 a good suburb for families?
Bardia NSW 2565 is a solid suburb for families, especially for buyers who want a house-based area with a younger resident profile. The suburb has strong family signals in the data: children aged 0 to 4 make up 13.65% of residents and those aged 5 to 14 account for 14.21%, while the average household size is 3.3 people. Housing is also heavily family-oriented, with separate houses making up 100% of the dwelling mix and no meaningful apartment share. That usually supports the kind of space many buyers want for kids, storage, and multi-generational living. School ratings are also a positive, with primary at 8 out of 10 and secondary at 6 out of 10, while safety sits at 3 out of 5, which reads as reasonable rather than standout. The trade-off is that Bardia feels more practical than prestige-led, so buyers wanting a very established, leafy or highly walkable family-friendly suburb may find it a bit limited.
What is it like to live in Bardia NSW 2565?
Living in Bardia NSW 2565 feels modern, practical and suburban rather than old-world or village-like. The suburb character comes through clearly as a new residential estate in South West & Macarthur, so the lifestyle is likely to appeal to buyers who prefer newer housing stock and a straightforward family setup. Bardia is an urban, built-up suburb rather than a leafy one, with canopy cover at 10.54%, and its walkability, retail and culture scores all sit at 2 out of 5. In everyday terms, that suggests a suburb where home life and local convenience matter more than café strips, high street character or walk-everywhere living. Safety at 3 out of 5 is middle-ground, so it is neither especially quiet-feeling nor especially hectic on the numbers alone. The main trade-off is that Bardia offers a clean, newer suburban lifestyle, but not the richer street atmosphere or greenery that some buyers expect from more established Sydney suburbs.
Is Bardia NSW 2565 well connected for commuting?
Bardia NSW 2565 is mixed rather than especially strong for commuting. On the positive side, bus service levels are listed as many, and the average drive to the Sydney CBD is around 40 minutes, which is workable for buyers who mainly commute by car. That said, the public transport picture is less convenient. The suburb does not currently have train, metro, light rail or ferry service recorded within the suburb itself, and the average public transport commute to the CBD is about 65 minutes. For many buyers, that means Bardia can still work for commuting, but it is not the sort of suburb you choose primarily for fast rail-based city access. In practical terms, Bardia suits households that are comfortable with buses, driving, or a mixed commute. The trade-off is simple: you may get newer housing and a family-oriented setting, but you give up some of the transport ease found in better-connected middle-ring suburbs.
Who does Bardia NSW 2565 suit best?
Bardia NSW 2565 suits young families, upgraders and professional households best, particularly those who want a modern house in Sydney’s south-west rather than apartment living. The suburb has a very clear housing profile: 100% separate houses and effectively no apartment market in the local mix. The median age is 29, which points to a younger community, and the family income level of $2,150 per week suggests many households are in the working family bracket rather than ultra-premium territory. Professionals are the largest occupation group at 24.51%, followed by clerical and administrative workers at 18.05% and technicians and trades workers at 16.95%, so Bardia reads as a practical, owner-oriented suburb with a broad mainstream buyer base. Around 33.12% of homes are rented, which gives it a slightly more active and mobile feel than tightly held prestige suburbs. It may suit downsizers or buyers wanting walkable urban buzz less well.
What are the pros and cons of living in Bardia NSW 2565?
The main trade-off in Bardia NSW 2565 is that you get modern family housing and a younger suburban community, but you give up some lifestyle richness and transport convenience. On the plus side, Bardia is strongly house-based, has many bus services, a reasonable 40-minute average drive to the CBD, and a younger demographic that often appeals to family buyers and owner-occupiers. Its school profile is also encouraging, especially on the primary side. For buyers who want a newer suburban environment, that can be a real advantage. The downside is that Bardia is more functional than character-filled. Walkability, retail and culture all sit at 2 out of 5, canopy cover is low at 10.54%, and the public transport commute to the CBD averages 65 minutes. Buyers who care most about greenery, established streetscapes, train access or a walk-to-shops lifestyle will notice those compromises more. For the right buyer, though, Bardia can still be a very sensible fit.
What are property prices like in Bardia NSW 2565?
Property prices in Bardia NSW 2565 look mid-range to expensive by broader Sydney buyer expectations, but still more accessible than many prestige house markets. Over the recent six-month sales window, houses had a median price of $1.18 million across 34 sales, with the middle market broadly sitting between $1.0 million at the lower quartile and $1.32 million at the upper quartile. That tells buyers the suburb has a reasonably active house market with a fairly clear family-home price band. Apartments had only four recorded sales, with a median of $620,000, so that segment is much thinner and less representative. In practical terms, buying property in Bardia means houses are the main story, and buyers are paying for newer suburban housing rather than blue-chip prestige or inner-city convenience. The trade-off is that you may get a more modern family home for the money, but you are not buying into a highly walkable or rail-connected suburb.
