
Bronte NSW 2024
Suburb summary
Bronte, NSW 2024 is a prestigious Eastern Suburbs beachside suburb in Sydney, Australia, known for Bronte Beach, coastal lifestyle and strong family appeal. In the last 6 months, Bronte recorded 10 house sales with a median price of $3.835M and 15 apartment sales with a median price of $1.65M. The suburb has 6,733 residents, median age 37, median family income $3,397 weekly, and 61.69% managers and professionals. Bronte offers beachfront access, many bus services, 40-minute public transport commute to the Sydney CBD, strong walkability, and top primary and secondary school ratings.
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
$5.8M
Derived from sales
House sales
39
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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124 popular houses in Bronte NSW 2024
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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116 popular apartments in Bronte NSW 2024
Demographic info
Median age
38 years
Renters
40%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Bronte NSW 2024: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Bronte NSW 2024 a good suburb for families?
Bronte NSW 2024 is a solid suburb for families, especially for buyers who value beach lifestyle and strong schooling over sheer house supply. The school profile is a clear strength, with both primary and secondary education rated 10 out of 5 in the supplied data, and the local child mix is meaningful rather than token, with 6.96% aged 0 to 4 and 13.6% aged 5 to 14. Average household size sits at 2.6, which also points to a suburb with established family households, not just singles and short-term renters. For buyers asking whether Bronte is a good suburb for families or good for kids, the answer is yes in a lifestyle-and-school sense. The trade-off is housing format and price pressure. Only 26% of homes are separate houses while 40% are apartments, so larger families wanting more space and easier parking may find choice tighter and budgets stretched.
What is it like to live in Bronte NSW 2024?
Living in Bronte NSW 2024 feels coastal, active and established, with a lifestyle built around the beach rather than a major shopping or transport hub. Bronte sits in the City & Eastern Suburbs and its character is described as iconic beach culture, which matches the beachfront setting and strong cultural and walkability scores of 4 out of 5. In practical terms, that usually means daily life has a strong outdoor rhythm, with easy access to the shoreline and a suburb identity that feels more lifestyle-led than purely suburban. Retail is more moderate at 3 out of 5, and canopy cover at 19.28% suggests Bronte is not especially leafy compared with some bigger inland family suburbs. Safety is 3 out of 5, so the feel is not one of total quiet or seclusion. Bronte lifestyle will strongly appeal to buyers who want beach access and energy, but less to those chasing a calmer, greener, walk-to-everything village atmosphere.
Is Bronte NSW 2024 well connected for commuting?
Bronte NSW 2024 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s most rail-integrated suburbs. There is no train station in Bronte itself, with T4 access available nearby via Bondi Junction, and there is no metro, light rail or ferry service in the suburb. The upside is bus coverage, which is rated as many, and the commute figures are still workable by Eastern Suburbs standards at around 40 minutes to the Sydney CBD by public transport and 20 minutes by car. For buyers searching Bronte public transport, commute to Sydney CBD, or whether Bronte is good for commuters, the answer is yes if you are comfortable using buses or travelling to a nearby station. The trade-off is obvious: commuting is less direct than in suburbs with their own train or metro stop. Buyers who want one-seat rail convenience may find Bronte a little less effortless day to day.
Who does Bronte NSW 2024 suit best?
Bronte NSW 2024 suits affluent professionals, lifestyle-focused couples and smaller families who want beachside living and can afford a premium Eastern Suburbs entry point. The resident profile is quite telling: 61.69% of locals are managers or professionals, the top occupation is Professionals at 40.4%, followed by Managers at 21.29%, and median weekly family income is $3,397. Median personal income is also high at $1,261. Housing is mixed rather than house-dominated, with 40% apartments and 26% separate houses, while 37.11% of homes are rented, which gives Bronte a more active, less tightly held feel than some pure family-house enclaves. In buyer terms, Bronte is best for people who prioritise beach lifestyle, status and everyday amenity over maximum land size. It may suit large families less well if they want a traditional detached-house suburb with more abundant housing stock, quieter streets and a broader supply of larger homes.
What are the pros and cons of living in Bronte NSW 2024?
The main trade-off in Bronte NSW 2024 is that buyers get an exceptional beachside lifestyle and strong professional appeal, but they give up some space, transport simplicity and value. Bronte does a lot well: it has beachfront access, a distinctive coastal identity, walkability and culture both rated 4 out of 5, and a resident base that reflects a high-income, established buyer market. For many people, that is exactly the appeal of living in Bronte. The compromises are just as real. Retail is moderate rather than outstanding at 3 out of 5, safety is also 3 out of 5, and public transport relies more on buses and nearby rail than on a station in the suburb itself. The housing mix also matters, with more apartments than houses in the available shares. Buyers who care most about land, easy parking, direct rail and a quieter family-suburban feel may notice those drawbacks more than committed beachside lifestyle buyers.
What are property prices like in Bronte NSW 2024?
Property prices in Bronte NSW 2024 are expensive to premium by Sydney standards, especially for houses. In the recent six-month sales data provided, Bronte houses had a median price of $4.175 million from 8 sales, with the upper end reaching $15 million, which places detached homes firmly in prestige territory. Apartments were more accessible than houses but still far from cheap, with a median price of $1.65 million across 12 sales. For buyers researching property prices in Bronte, house prices in Bronte, or whether Bronte is expensive, the short answer is yes. The pricing tells you Bronte is a suburb where buyers are paying heavily for beachside position, Eastern Suburbs status and lifestyle appeal. The trade-off is budget pressure and limited room for compromise if you want a house. Apartments may offer a more realistic entry point, but even they require a strong budget compared with many other Sydney suburbs.
