Brooklyn NSW 2083 property reports

Brooklyn NSW 2083

Suburb

Suburb summary

Brooklyn NSW 2083 is a Hawkesbury River village in Sydney’s Upper North Shore and Hornsby region, popular for buyers searching Brooklyn NSW real estate, Hawkesbury River lifestyle, and waterfront village living. The suburb has 722 residents, a median age of 48, and a low population density of 22.47 people per sq km across 32.1375 sq km. Separate houses dominate housing stock at 86%, with apartments at 7%. Brooklyn offers T1 train access, limited bus services, nearby beach access, river and creek surroundings, a 75-minute CBD public transport commute, and a 55-minute drive.

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

$1.1M

Derived from sales

House sales

6

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

48 years

Renters

20%

Top 3 occupations

Managers20%
Professionals20%
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 Brooklyn NSW 2083: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Brooklyn NSW 2083 a good suburb for families?

Brooklyn NSW 2083 is a mixed option for families rather than a clear-cut family suburb. The biggest positives are its house-heavy feel, with separate houses making up 86% of homes, and a secondary-school rating of 10 out of 5 not being available but the primary-school rating sitting at 2 out of 5, which suggests families should look closely at schooling choices rather than assume the suburb itself does the heavy lifting. Children are certainly part of the local mix, with around 9.7% of residents aged 5 to 14, but the median age of 48 and average household size of 2.5 point to a quieter, older-skewing community rather than a classic packed-with-young-families area. For buyers asking whether Brooklyn is a good suburb for families, the answer depends on priorities: it suits families wanting a village setting and detached housing more than those chasing top local school depth, stronger safety scores, or a busier kid-focused neighbourhood feel.

What is it like to live in Brooklyn NSW 2083?

Living in Brooklyn NSW 2083 feels village-like, scenic and tied closely to the Hawkesbury River, rather than fast-paced or highly urban. The suburb character reads as a Hawkesbury River village, and that really matches the broader lifestyle picture: cultural life is relatively strong at 4 out of 5, while retail sits at 2 out of 5 and walkability at 1 out of 5. In practical terms, living in Brooklyn is likely to appeal to buyers who value atmosphere, water proximity and a more distinctive setting over everyday convenience. The river-adjacent environment gives Brooklyn a lifestyle quality that stands out from more built-up Sydney suburbs, even though it is not a beach suburb. The trade-off is that the suburb is not especially easy for errands on foot, and shopping choice looks modest. Buyers who want a calm base with character may find Brooklyn very appealing, while those wanting a walk-everywhere, highly convenient suburb may find it limiting.

Is Brooklyn NSW 2083 well connected for commuting?

Brooklyn NSW 2083 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not the kind of suburb that offers lots of transport options. The key strength is train access on the T1 line, which gives Brooklyn a genuine public transport link into Sydney rather than leaving residents fully car-dependent. Public transport commute time to the CBD is about 75 minutes, while driving averages around 55 minutes, so the suburb is connected but not especially quick for city-based commuters. There is no metro, no light rail and no ferry service, and bus coverage is limited, which means the transport picture is fairly narrow compared with more central suburbs. For buyers searching Brooklyn public transport or whether Brooklyn is good for commuters, the answer is yes if you are comfortable with a longer trip and value rail access. If you need multiple transport modes, shorter CBD travel times, or flexible last-minute commuting, Brooklyn may feel less convenient.

Who does Brooklyn NSW 2083 suit best?

Brooklyn NSW 2083 suits buyers who want a detached-house lifestyle in a character suburb and are comfortable with a quieter, older-skewing community. The housing mix is a strong clue here: 86% of homes are separate houses and only 7% are apartments, so Brooklyn is far more aligned with house buyers than unit-driven, high-density living. The resident profile also points to a more established owner-occupier market, with renting at about 18.6%, a median age of 48, and a solid 39.9% of residents working as managers or professionals. The top occupations are Professionals, Managers and Trades, which suggests a practical but relatively established buyer base rather than a transient renter-heavy scene. For people asking who Brooklyn suits best, it is strongest for buyers wanting character, space and a more settled feel. It may suit young apartment-first buyers or those wanting an energetic, highly urban social environment less well.

What are the pros and cons of living in Brooklyn NSW 2083?

The main trade-off in Brooklyn NSW 2083 is that you get character, river setting and detached housing, but you give up a fair bit of everyday convenience. On the plus side, Brooklyn has a distinctive village identity, strong cultural character at 4 out of 5, direct train access on the T1 line, and a very high separate-house share of 86%, which is hard to ignore for buyers wanting a genuine house suburb. The lower rental share also suggests a more settled market than many high-turnover areas. On the other hand, walkability is only 1 out of 5, retail is 2 out of 5, buses are limited, and CBD commute times are not short. Safety at 2 out of 5 is another reason buyers should assess their own comfort level rather than assume a classic peaceful family enclave. Brooklyn can still be a very good fit for buyers who value setting and individuality more than convenience.

What are property prices like in Brooklyn NSW 2083?

Property prices in Brooklyn NSW 2083 are hard to pin down from recent sales evidence alone, but the suburb appears more likely to sit in the expensive-to-premium bracket for houses than at the affordable end of Sydney. That view comes less from recent transaction volume, which is too thin here to give a reliable suburb-level median from the latest six months, and more from the kind of market Brooklyn represents: a tightly held, detached-house suburb with 86% separate houses, low rental share and a distinctive riverfront village lifestyle. In buyer terms, that usually means houses are the main market and entry points can be limited, especially when stock is scarce. The practical trade-off is that buyers may be paying for uniqueness, setting and housing type rather than for broad convenience, walkability or major shopping amenity. For apartment buyers, Brooklyn is a much smaller market, so choice may be restricted even when pricing looks more approachable.