Beecroft NSW 2119 property reports

Beecroft NSW 2119

Suburb

Suburb summary

Beecroft NSW 2119 is a sought-after Upper North Shore suburb in Sydney, Australia, known for family-friendly living, strong schools, and leafy residential streets. It has 9,396 residents, a median age of 43, median weekly family income of $2,865, and 49.42% canopy cover. Housing is dominated by houses (2,661 homes, 89%), with apartments making up 5%. The suburb has train access on the T1/T9 lines, many bus services, and average CBD commute times of 40 minutes by public transport and 30 minutes by car. In the past 6 months, median sold prices were $2.80M for houses and $910K for apartments.

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

$2.6M

Derived from sales

House sales

91

In past 12 months

Sign in to view:

Pocket Price Map

Pocket price distribution map preview

Explore higher and lower-priced pockets across the suburb.

Apartment projects

View apartment projects around the suburb.

Sign in to view:

PROJECTS MAP

Apartment projects map preview

Explore apartment projects across the suburb to understand supply and density.

Demographic info

Median age

43 years

Renters

20%

Top 3 occupations

Professionals40%
Managers20%
Technicians and Trades Workers10%

Try the knest.ai app

Full property insights and property decision tools are best experienced in the knest.ai app.

5.0 rating

15k users

Download appOpen in app

Living in Beecroft NSW 2119: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Beecroft NSW 2119 a good suburb for families?

Beecroft NSW 2119 is a strong suburb for families, especially for buyers who value schooling, safety and a house-dominated streetscape. The school profile is a standout, with both primary and secondary education rated 5 out of 5, and safety also comes in at a solid 4 out of 5. That matters for buyers searching for a good suburb for families or wondering whether Beecroft is good for kids. The housing mix also supports that family appeal: around 89% of homes are separate houses, while apartments make up only about 5%, which usually means more space, more backyards and a less dense feel. Children are well represented too, with roughly 4.7% aged 0 to 4 and 14.8% aged 5 to 14, while the average household size of 3.1 suggests established family living. The trade-off is price, because family homes here are not entry-level for Sydney buyers.

What is it like to live in Beecroft NSW 2119?

Living in Beecroft NSW 2119 feels established, leafy and quietly residential rather than fast-paced or highly urban. Beecroft sits in the Upper North Shore and Hornsby corridor, and the local character comes through as upper north shore residential with strong bushland influence. Tree canopy cover is high at 49.42%, which supports a greener outlook than many Sydney suburbs, while the environmental setting next to bushland and national park areas adds to that calm suburban feel. In day-to-day terms, the lifestyle is more about space, greenery and settled streets than constant activity. Retail scores 4 out of 5, so there is useful local amenity, but walkability is 3 out of 5 and culture is 3 out of 5, which suggests convenience without a strong inner-city buzz. That means Beecroft lifestyle will suit buyers wanting calm and quality, though buyers chasing nightlife, beach access or a walk-everywhere urban scene may find it a little quiet.

Is Beecroft NSW 2119 well connected for commuting?

Beecroft NSW 2119 is reasonably well connected for commuting, especially for buyers who want direct train access without giving up a suburban setting. The suburb has its own train service on the T1 and T9 lines, buses are plentiful, and the average public transport commute to the Sydney CBD is about 40 minutes, compared with around 30 minutes by car. For many Upper North Shore buyers, that is a workable balance between access and lifestyle. Beecroft does not currently have metro, light rail or ferry service, so the transport picture is good rather than exceptional across every mode. In practical terms, public transport is a real option here, which helps commuters who prefer rail over driving. The trade-off is that it is still a suburban commute rather than a short inner-ring trip, so buyers wanting multiple transport modes or the fastest possible CBD access may compare it with more central locations.

Who does Beecroft NSW 2119 suit best?

Beecroft NSW 2119 suits established families, professional households and upgrade buyers best. The suburb’s housing mix points clearly in that direction: around 89% separate houses and only about 5% apartments means Beecroft is much more geared to buyers looking for land, larger homes and a quieter residential setting than compact apartment living. The resident profile also supports that positioning. Professionals make up about 41.0% of occupations, managers around 17.4%, and managers and professionals together account for roughly 58.3% of the workforce. Median weekly family income sits at $2,865, and the median age is 43, which suggests a mature, settled owner-occupier market rather than a transient rental-heavy area. Rental share is relatively low at about 12.1%, reinforcing that tightly held feel. The limitation is that first-home buyers or apartment-focused buyers may find Beecroft less accessible, especially if they want a lower price point or a more urban lifestyle.

What are the pros and cons of living in Beecroft NSW 2119?

The main trade-off in Beecroft NSW 2119 is that you get space, greenery and strong family fundamentals, but not the energy or convenience level of Sydney’s more urban hubs. On the plus side, Beecroft performs well where many long-term buyers care most: safety is 4 out of 5, both school ratings are 5 out of 5, tree canopy cover is a high 49.42%, and the suburb is heavily house-based rather than apartment-dense. Train access on the T1 and T9 lines is a genuine advantage, and many buses add flexibility for day-to-day travel. On the other hand, walkability, culture and retail sit in the mid-range rather than at standout inner-city levels, and there is no beach, ferry, metro or light rail access. So the disadvantages of living in Beecroft mainly come down to pace and price rather than any major weakness. For buyers who want calm, family space and a strong school-led suburb, those trade-offs may feel entirely reasonable.

What are property prices like in Beecroft NSW 2119?

Property prices in Beecroft NSW 2119 are expensive by normal Sydney buyer expectations, particularly for houses. In the most recent six-month sales data, houses had a median sale price of $2.8 million across 33 sales, with the middle market sitting broadly between about $2.57 million at the 25th percentile and $3.05 million at the 75th percentile. Higher-end house sales pushed to around $4.011 million, which shows how much budget pressure can rise for larger or more tightly held homes. Apartments are a different entry point, with a median of $857,000 from 4 sales, although that is a much smaller sample and should be read more cautiously. In practical terms, buying property in Beecroft usually means paying a premium for house stock, school appeal and a low-density Upper North Shore setting. The trade-off is straightforward: buyers pay more for space, schooling and suburb quality, while apartment buyers may find a more accessible entry point with less land and a different lifestyle feel.