
Campsie NSW 2194
Suburb summary
Campsie, NSW 2194 is a Canterbury–Bankstown suburb in Sydney known as a major Asian commercial hub with strong walkability and retail appeal. The population is 24,541 across 3.3734 sq km, with median age 34 and population density 7,274.86 people per sq km. Apartments make up 45% of homes and houses 16%. In the past 6 months, median sold prices were $679,000 for apartments and $1,932,000 for houses. Campsie has a 40-minute public transport commute to the Sydney CBD, many bus services, primary school rating 5, safety 3, culture 5, and a strong Chinese community presence.
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
$1.9M
Derived from sales
House sales
58
In past 12 months
Sign in to view:
Pocket Price Map

Explore higher and lower-priced pockets across the suburb.
144 popular houses in Campsie NSW 2194
Apartment projects
View apartment projects around the suburb.Sign in to view:
PROJECTS MAP

Explore apartment projects across the suburb to understand supply and density.
688 popular apartments in Campsie NSW 2194
Demographic info
Median age
36 years
Renters
50%
Top 3 occupations
Try the knest.ai app
Full property insights and property decision tools are best experienced in the knest.ai app.
Living in Campsie NSW 2194: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Campsie NSW 2194 a good suburb for families?
Campsie NSW 2194 is a mixed rather than standout option for families. It has some real strengths for buyers with children, especially day-to-day convenience and a lived-in family base. Children aged 0 to 4 make up about 6.1% of residents and those aged 5 to 14 around 9.2%, while the average household size is 2.9, which suggests plenty of family households already choose Campsie. Safety sits at 3 out of 5, so it is not a suburb I would describe as especially calm or sheltered, but it is also not a weak family setting if you value practicality. The main trade-off is housing mix. Separate houses are only about 16% of homes, while apartments are around 45%, so larger families wanting backyard space may find options tighter. For buyers prioritising access, services and everyday convenience over a quiet low-density setting, Campsie can still be a solid family-friendly suburb.
What is it like to live in Campsie NSW 2194?
Living in Campsie NSW 2194 feels urban, busy and highly practical. Campsie sits in the Canterbury–Bankstown region and reads as a major Asian commercial hub, which matches its strong retail score of 5 out of 5 and culture score of 5 out of 5. For buyers asking what it is like to live in Campsie, the appeal is everyday functionality: shops, food, services and activity are part of the suburb’s identity, and walkability at 4 out of 5 supports that convenient local lifestyle. This is not a leafy or beachside suburb though. The environment is built-up, beach access is none, and tree canopy is only 13.12%, so the feel is more energetic and concrete than green and relaxed. Safety is 3 out of 5, which is workable but not especially serene. Campsie lifestyle suits buyers who enjoy access and multicultural street life more than those chasing a quiet village atmosphere.
Is Campsie NSW 2194 well connected for commuting?
Campsie NSW 2194 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but the picture is mixed right now. Bus coverage is strong, with many services, and average travel time to the Sydney CBD is about 40 minutes by public transport or 25 minutes by car, which is workable for a large part of the buyer market. The key qualification is rail. Campsie does not currently have active train service, because the former T3 rail connection is closed for metro conversion, and metro service is still planned rather than operating today. That means the suburb has improving transport infrastructure, but buyers should think about current conditions, not just future upside. There is no ferry or light rail option either. So if you are asking whether Campsie is good for commuters, the answer is yes for practical bus-based commuting and decent driving access, but less so if you want multiple transport modes available immediately.
Who does Campsie NSW 2194 suit best?
Campsie NSW 2194 suits buyers who want an urban, connected and more affordable entry point than many inner and middle-ring Sydney suburbs. The suburb’s housing mix leans away from traditional family houses, with separate houses at about 16% and apartments around 45%, so it makes more sense for apartment buyers, smaller households and those comfortable with denser living. Median personal income is $486 weekly and median family income is $1,274, while the median age is 34, which points to a relatively young and working suburb rather than a prestige enclave. Professionals are the largest occupation group at 16.2%, but the resident base is fairly mixed, with labourers and trades also strongly represented. Rental share is high at 52.7%, so Campsie feels active and less tightly held than some owner-occupier suburbs. It will likely suit first-home buyers, practical owner-occupiers and some investors more than buyers seeking a quiet, house-dominated family suburb.
What are the pros and cons of living in Campsie NSW 2194?
The main trade-off in Campsie NSW 2194 is convenience and cultural energy versus lower calm, greenery and housing space. On the plus side, Campsie does everyday living very well. Walkability is 4 out of 5, retail is 5 out of 5, culture is 5 out of 5, and bus services are plentiful, so buyers who want shops, food and services close at hand will see real value here. Commute times are also reasonable by Sydney standards, especially by car. The compromise is that Campsie is a built-up urban suburb with only 13.12% canopy cover, no beach access, and safety at 3 out of 5, so it does not offer the same peaceful or leafy feel as lower-density areas. The current rail disruption during metro conversion is another practical consideration. Buyers who care most about a backyard, quiet streets and a more relaxed suburban atmosphere may hesitate, but for people who prioritise access and convenience, Campsie can still be a smart fit.
What are property prices like in Campsie NSW 2194?
Property prices in Campsie NSW 2194 are relatively affordable by Sydney standards for apartments, while houses are much more expensive and harder to access. Over the past six months, apartment sales in Campsie had a median price of $685,000 across 89 sales, with the middle market broadly sitting below many higher-priced inner-ring suburbs. That makes buying property in Campsie more realistic for first-home buyers, downsizers or investors looking for a better-value unit market. Houses are a different story. The median house price was $1,932,000 from 15 sales, which shows that house prices in Campsie rise sharply once you want land and a traditional family home. The practical takeaway is simple: Campsie can be a lower entry suburb if you are open to an apartment, but buyers chasing a house still face meaningful budget pressure and relatively limited supply.
