Beverley Park NSW 2217 property reports

Beverley Park NSW 2217

Suburb

Suburb summary

Beverley Park, NSW 2217 is a residential St George suburb in Sydney covering 1.0055 sq km, with a population of 2,393 and median age 39. Popular searches like Beverley Park suburb profile, Beverley Park property market, and living in Beverley Park fit its mainly house-based character: 81% separate houses and 16% apartments. Median weekly personal income is $754 and family income is $2,103. Recent sales were limited, with house median price at $3.0M from 3 sales and apartment median price at $650,000 from 2 sales. Beverley Park has strong primary school and good secondary school ratings, walkability 4/5, safety 3/5, and many bus services.

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

$2.1M

Derived from sales

House sales

16

In past 12 months

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Pocket Price Map

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Explore higher and lower-priced pockets across the suburb.

Demographic info

Median age

42 years

Renters

30%

Top 3 occupations

Professionals30%
Clerical and Administrative Workers20%
Managers10%

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Living in Beverley Park NSW 2217: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Beverley Park NSW 2217 a good suburb for families?

Beverley Park NSW 2217 is a solid rather than standout suburb for families. The biggest positive is its housing mix: about 81% of homes are separate houses, which usually suits buyers wanting more internal space, a backyard, and easier day-to-day living with kids or older family members. The local age mix also points to an established family presence, with children aged 0 to 4 making up 5.8% of residents and those aged 5 to 14 around 13.3%, while the average household size of 2.8 suggests many homes are set up for family living rather than purely singles or downsizers. Safety sits at 3 out of 5, so Beverley Park feels more balanced than especially quiet or highly sheltered. School ratings are 10 out of 5 for primary and 8 out of 5 for secondary in the supplied data, which reads as supportive for family buyers, but I would still treat school choice as something to check closely at individual level. The trade-off is that Beverley Park is more practical than prestige-led, so families get space and a settled feel, but not the strongest convenience or lifestyle depth.

What is it like to live in Beverley Park NSW 2217?

Living in Beverley Park NSW 2217 feels established, residential, and practical. It sits in the St George region and comes through as a straightforward suburban pocket rather than a highly polished village hub or dense urban centre. Day to day, the suburb is easier to move around on foot than many house-heavy areas, with walkability rated 4 out of 5, but retail is only 2 out of 5, so buyers should not expect a strong café strip or major shopping scene within the suburb itself. Culture is a middle 3 out of 5, which usually points to a suburb that is liveable and settled without being especially buzzy. Tree canopy is modest at 16.17%, and the setting is urban and built-up, so Beverley Park is not the kind of suburb buyers usually choose for a leafy, green streetscape. The upside is a grounded, low-fuss lifestyle with real houses and a familiar suburban rhythm. The trade-off is that the suburb lifestyle is more functional than atmospheric.

Is Beverley Park NSW 2217 well connected for commuting?

Beverley Park NSW 2217 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s most direct transport suburbs. The key strength is access to many bus services and nearby train access via Kogarah on the T4 line, which helps keep public transport workable for city-bound buyers. Average travel time to the Sydney CBD is about 45 minutes by public transport and around 25 minutes by car, so Beverley Park can suit commuters who want a manageable trip without paying for a more inner-city address. There is no metro, light rail, or ferry service in the suburb, so the transport picture is functional rather than broad-based. In practical terms, Beverley Park works best for buyers comfortable with a bus-to-train pattern or a driving-led routine. The trade-off is that while commuting is quite achievable, it is less seamless than in suburbs with their own train station or multiple rail options right on the doorstep.

Who does Beverley Park NSW 2217 suit best?

Beverley Park NSW 2217 suits buyers who want a house-oriented suburb with a practical St George lifestyle, especially families, upgraders, and established households. Around 81% of homes are separate houses and only about 16% are apartments, so the suburb naturally appeals more to buyers prioritising land, home size, and longer-term liveability than to those chasing a dense, apartment-led environment. The resident profile also leans steady and established: median age is 39, median weekly family income is $2,103, and professionals and managers form a meaningful share of the workforce, with professionals alone making up about 25.0% of occupations. Rental share is about 27.7%, which suggests Beverley Park is still fairly owner-occupied in feel, without being completely tightly held. For buyers, that often means a more settled neighbourhood rhythm. It may suit apartment-first buyers, nightlife-focused singles, or those wanting high walk-to-retail convenience less well, because Beverley Park is more suburban and house-focused than urban and high-energy.

What are the pros and cons of living in Beverley Park NSW 2217?

The main trade-off in Beverley Park NSW 2217 is that buyers get solid suburban liveability and house stock, but give up some vibrancy and convenience in return. On the plus side, Beverley Park has a strong detached-house profile, decent walkability at 4 out of 5, many bus services, nearby T4 train access, and commuting times that are workable for Sydney standards. That combination will appeal to buyers who want a practical family base in St George rather than a high-density urban setting. Safety and culture both sit at 3 out of 5, which suggests a balanced suburb that functions well without standing out as especially lively or especially serene. The downsides are mostly lifestyle-related: retail is only 2 out of 5, there is no train station in the suburb itself, and canopy cover at 16.17% means the streetscape is less leafy than some buyers expect. Beverley Park can still be a very good fit if your priority is house-based living and access over buzz and atmosphere.

What are property prices like in Beverley Park NSW 2217?

Property prices in Beverley Park NSW 2217 look expensive by normal Sydney buyer expectations, at least for houses in the recent sales sample. Over the last six months, the suburb recorded house sales with a median price of $3,000,000, an average of about $3,342,500, and a sale range from $3,000,000 to $3,685,000. That points to a high entry point for buyers wanting a freestanding home in Beverley Park, even allowing for the very small sample size of just two recorded house sales. In practical terms, buying property in Beverley Park is likely to suit households with a stronger budget who value established house stock in the St George area and are willing to pay for that format. The trade-off is straightforward: you may be paying a premium for house supply and location while still not getting the retail depth, transport simplicity, or prestige feel that some similarly priced Sydney suburbs offer. No apartment pricing was supplied in the recent results, so the clearer pricing signal here is for houses.