
Bringelly NSW 2556
Suburb summary
Bringelly, NSW 2556 is a South West Sydney suburb in the South West & Macarthur region with 2,507 residents across 40.2134 sq km. Popular searches like Bringelly suburb profile, Bringelly NSW property market and living in Bringelly fit its rural-residential transition character, 100% separate houses, zero apartments and low population density of 62.34 people per sq km. Median age is 39, average household size is 3.4, and 20.06% of homes are rented. In the past 6 months, 2 house sales were recorded with a median sold price of $3.02M. Commute averages are 45 minutes driving and 140 minutes by public transport to the Sydney CBD.
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
$3.2M
Derived from sales
House sales
7
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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23 popular houses in Bringelly NSW 2556
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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Demographic info
Median age
42 years
Renters
20%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Bringelly NSW 2556: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Bringelly NSW 2556 a good suburb for families?
Bringelly NSW 2556 is a mixed option for families rather than a strong all-round family suburb. The biggest positive is space: the suburb is almost entirely separate houses, apartments are effectively absent, and the average household size of 3.4 suggests homes are set up for family living rather than compact urban density. The primary school rating is 6 out of 5 on the supplied scale, which points to a very strong result on that front, and children make up a reasonable share of the population, with 5.8% aged 0 to 4 and 13% aged 5 to 14. That gives Bringelly some real appeal for buyers wanting land, room for kids, and a house-based lifestyle. The trade-off is that schools and safety are not the whole story. Safety is 2 out of 5, and the suburb is not especially walkable or convenient day to day. Secondary school data is not available here, so family buyers should think beyond the block size and consider how much they value easy local amenities, a calmer established streetscape, and shorter everyday travel.
What is it like to live in Bringelly NSW 2556?
Living in Bringelly NSW 2556 feels practical, spacious, and transitional rather than polished or village-like. The suburb character is described as rural-residential transition, which fits a place where buyers often choose land, lower-density living, and a more open setting over an established urban lifestyle. At the same time, the environmental profile is more urban built-up than leafy, with canopy cover at 15.96%, so Bringelly does not read as a classic green North Shore-style suburb. Walkability is 1 out of 5, retail is 1 out of 5, culture is 2 out of 5, and safety is 2 out of 5, so day-to-day living is likely to feel car-oriented and fairly quiet in terms of local amenity. That mix will suit some buyers very well. If you value house space and a less compressed feel, Bringelly can be appealing. The trade-off is that living in Bringelly usually means giving up walk-to-shops convenience, stronger local atmosphere, and the easy everyday lifestyle that more established Sydney suburbs offer.
Is Bringelly NSW 2556 well connected for commuting?
Bringelly NSW 2556 is less convenient for commuting at the moment, especially if you want multiple public transport options. The current transport picture is straightforward: there is no train, no metro, no light rail, and no ferry service in the suburb, although buses are available at a stronger level. For commuting to the Sydney CBD, the average public transport trip is 140 minutes, while driving is around 45 minutes. That tells buyers clearly that Bringelly works much better for households relying on the car than for those wanting a simple train-based CBD commute. This does not make Bringelly disconnected for every buyer, but it does make the trade-off quite clear. If your work and lifestyle are centred around South West Sydney, airport-related employment areas, or flexible driving-based routines, the suburb may still work well. If you need fast, consistent public transport into central Sydney several times a week, Bringelly is a harder fit than suburbs with rail or metro access already in place.
Who does Bringelly NSW 2556 suit best?
Bringelly NSW 2556 suits buyers who prioritise house living, space, and a more outer-suburban or transitional lifestyle over walkable convenience. The housing mix is almost entirely separate houses, with no meaningful apartment market, so Bringelly naturally appeals more to house buyers than to downsizers or apartment-first professionals. The suburb also has a modest rental share at 20.06%, which suggests a more owner-oriented feel than many higher-turnover areas. The resident profile leans toward practical working households: the top occupations are technicians and trades workers at 19.38%, clerical and administrative workers at 16.04%, and machinery operators and drivers at 14.29%. Median weekly personal income is $610 and median family income is $1,738, with a median age of 39. In buyer terms, Bringelly is likely to suit families wanting land, multigenerational households, and buyers who are comfortable driving for most errands. It may suit inner-city professionals less well, particularly those wanting a lively local café strip, stronger walkability, or a faster public transport commute to the CBD.
What are the pros and cons of living in Bringelly NSW 2556?
The main trade-off in Bringelly NSW 2556 is simple: you get house-based space and a less dense lifestyle, but you give up convenience and easy CBD access. For many buyers, the strongest positive is the housing format. Bringelly is overwhelmingly made up of separate houses, average household size is relatively high at 3.4, and the suburb’s rural-residential transition character gives it a more open feel than denser parts of Sydney. That can be attractive for families, buyers with more vehicles, and households who simply want room around them. The compromise is just as important. Walkability is 1 out of 5, retail is 1 out of 5, culture is 2 out of 5, safety is 2 out of 5, and public transport to the CBD averages 140 minutes. In practice, that means Bringelly is better for buyers who accept a driving-based lifestyle than for those who want a walk-everywhere suburb. For the right buyer, especially one focused on land and house living, those compromises may still be worth it.
What are property prices like in Bringelly NSW 2556?
Property prices in Bringelly NSW 2556 look expensive in practical Sydney terms, especially for house buyers. In the recent six-month sales data available here, Bringelly recorded house sales only, with a median house price of $3.02 million, an average of $3.81 million, and a recorded range from $3.02 million to $4.6 million. That is a very limited sample of just two house sales, so buyers should treat it as an indicator of the suburb’s current price level rather than a broad market read. Even so, it clearly places Bringelly in a high-entry bracket for houses. What that suggests in buyer terms is that Bringelly is not a low-cost way to buy space. You may be paying a substantial amount for land, house format, and long-term area positioning, even though the suburb is not strong on walkability, retail, or current public transport convenience. For buyers who want large house-style living, that may still stack up. For buyers chasing everyday convenience, the value equation is more debatable.
