Berrilee NSW 2159 property reports

Berrilee NSW 2159

Suburb

Suburb summary

Berrilee, NSW 2159 is a semi-rural suburb in Sydney’s Upper North Shore and Hornsby area, known for bushland living and a quiet residential character. It spans 12.07 sq km, has a population of 224, low density of 18.57 people per sq km, and a median age of 44. Housing is entirely separate houses, with no apartments recorded. Average household size is 3.3 and renting is low at 19.4%. Berrilee demographics show strong Australian- and England-born ties, with English and Australian ancestry most common. For buyers researching Berrilee property, schools rate 5/5, safety 4/5, and CBD commute is about 105 minutes by public transport or 55 minutes driving.

Pocket Price Distribution

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Suburb median

Derived from sales

House sales

0

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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Demographic info

Median age

51 years

Renters

20%

Top 3 occupations

Professionals20%
Technicians and Trades Workers20%
Managers10%

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Living in Berrilee NSW 2159: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Berrilee NSW 2159 a good suburb for families?

Berrilee NSW 2159 is a solid suburb for families who value space, safety and a quieter setting more than day-to-day convenience. The family profile is fairly supportive: children make up a meaningful share of the population, with about 5.0% aged 0 to 4 and 13.2% aged 5 to 14, while the average household size of 3.3 suggests larger family households are common. Housing is also strongly family-oriented, with separate houses making up 100% of homes and apartments effectively absent. Safety reads well at 4 out of 5, which is a positive for buyers thinking about kids, routines and a calmer home base. The trade-off is schooling and convenience. The local education ratings sit at 10 out of 5 for both primary and secondary in the supplied data, which looks unusually high, so I would treat that carefully rather than lean on it heavily, and walkability is low. For families wanting acreage-style living and a bushland feel, Berrilee can work well, but it may suit car-dependent households better than buyers wanting a more plugged-in family suburb.

What is it like to live in Berrilee NSW 2159?

Living in Berrilee NSW 2159 feels calm, bushland-oriented and semi-rural rather than urban or highly convenient. The suburb sits in the Upper North Shore and Hornsby region, and its character is clearly defined as bushland residential, with bushland and national park adjacency shaping the lifestyle. In practical terms, that means living in Berrilee is likely to appeal to buyers who want privacy, lower-density surroundings and a stronger connection to nature than to cafés, shops or street activity. Safety is relatively strong at 4 out of 5, which supports the sense of a settled residential environment. The trade-off is that everyday convenience looks limited. Walkability is 1 out of 5, retail is 1 out of 5, and culture is 2 out of 5, so this is not a walk-everywhere suburb with a busy local scene. Berrilee lifestyle is better suited to buyers who genuinely want quiet space and do not mind relying on the car for most errands.

Is Berrilee NSW 2159 well connected for commuting?

Berrilee NSW 2159 is less convenient for commuting, especially if you want multiple public transport options close by. The suburb does not currently have train, metro or light rail service, bus access is limited, and there is no ferry option, so the transport picture is clearly car-led rather than network-rich. That shows up in commute times as well: the average trip to the Sydney CBD is about 105 minutes by public transport and around 55 minutes by car. For buyers asking whether Berrilee is good for commuters, the answer is mixed at best. It can still work for households with flexible schedules, partial work-from-home arrangements, or jobs focused around the north-west or outer north rather than the CBD. The trade-off is obvious: you get a more secluded bushland setting, but you give up transport convenience. Buyers who commute daily into central Sydney will likely feel that compromise more than those prioritising lifestyle space over speed.

Who does Berrilee NSW 2159 suit best?

Berrilee NSW 2159 suits best buyers who want a detached home, a quieter bushland setting and a more established household profile rather than a dense or highly transient suburb. The housing mix is very clear, with 100% separate houses and no apartment market, so Berrilee naturally fits buyers looking for land, privacy and a traditional house-based lifestyle. It also appears to attract a relatively settled resident base, with renters at 19.4%, which is lower than many more urban Sydney suburbs. Occupationally, professionals are the largest group at 21.9%, followed by trades and technical workers at 15.8% and clerical and administrative workers at 14.0%, suggesting a mixed but stable owner-occupier style market. The median age is 44, which reinforces the impression of a mature suburb rather than a younger, fast-turnover area. The trade-off is that Berrilee may suit downsizers into low-maintenance apartments, highly social urban buyers, and heavy CBD commuters less well than households wanting space and a quieter daily rhythm.

What are the pros and cons of living in Berrilee NSW 2159?

The main trade-off in Berrilee NSW 2159 is simple: you gain space, privacy and a bushland lifestyle, but you give up convenience and fast transport access. What Berrilee does well is fairly clear from the data. It has a strong safety rating of 4 out of 5, a fully separate-house housing base, a lower-rental profile than many Sydney suburbs, and a character shaped by bushland and national park surroundings. For buyers who want room to spread out and a quieter residential setting, those are meaningful advantages. The compromise is just as important to understand. Walkability is 1 out of 5, retail is 1 out of 5, culture is 2 out of 5, buses are limited, and there is no train, metro, light rail or ferry service in the suburb. That will matter most to buyers who want cafés, shops, schools, transport and errands close at hand. For the right buyer, though, Berrilee can still be a very appealing lifestyle choice.

What are property prices like in Berrilee NSW 2159?

Property prices in Berrilee NSW 2159 are hard to read from recent sales volume, but the suburb is more likely to sit in the expensive-to-premium conversation than the affordable end for Sydney house buyers. The clearest reason is the housing profile: Berrilee is entirely separate houses, with no apartment market showing in the suburb mix, which usually means buyers are competing for land-based homes rather than lower-entry attached stock. Recent suburb sales data did not return a usable house or apartment price benchmark here, which often happens in tightly held, low-turnover suburbs where there are simply not many transactions in a short period. In buyer terms, that means Berrilee is probably not the place to expect frequent choice or easy entry-level buying. The trade-off is that purchasers are usually paying for space, privacy and a bushland setting rather than convenience or walkable urban lifestyle. For buyers specifically chasing a house on larger land in a quieter pocket, that may still represent worthwhile value.