
Cartwright NSW 2168
Suburb summary
Cartwright, NSW 2168 is a suburb in South West Sydney’s South West & Macarthur region, covering 0.9627 sq km with a population of 2,370 and median age 37. Cartwright property market data shows 8 house sales in the past 6 months with a $1.00M median house price, plus 2 apartment sales with a $500,000 median unit price. Housing in Cartwright includes 522 separate houses and 263 apartments. Median weekly personal income is $406 and family income is $989. The suburb has many bus services, no train or metro station, and average CBD commute times of 80 minutes by public transport and 40 minutes by car.
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
$1M
Derived from sales
House sales
19
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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39 popular houses in Cartwright NSW 2168
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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7 popular apartments in Cartwright NSW 2168
Demographic info
Median age
35 years
Renters
60%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Cartwright NSW 2168: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Cartwright NSW 2168 a good suburb for families?
Cartwright NSW 2168 is a mixed option for families rather than a clear standout family-friendly suburb. The strongest family signals are the school ratings, with both primary and secondary education at 6 out of 5 in the supplied data, plus a meaningful child population, with 7.3% aged 0 to 4 and 14.1% aged 5 to 14. Housing also leans toward family practicality more than inner-city density, with 50% separate houses and an average household size of 2.6 people, which suggests Cartwright is not dominated by very small households. The trade-off is that Cartwright is not especially strong on safety or lifestyle softness, with safety rated 2 out of 5 and only a 25% apartment share, so the suburb feels more practical than polished. For buyers searching for a good suburb for families, schools and house access are positives, but families sensitive to a quieter or more prestige-led environment may want to weigh that carefully. Cartwright can still work well for value-focused family buyers who prioritise space and schooling over image.
What is it like to live in Cartwright NSW 2168?
Living in Cartwright NSW 2168 feels practical, urban and down-to-earth rather than polished or lifestyle-led. Cartwright sits in Sydney’s South West & Macarthur region and its character is described as industrial-residential, which fits with the data overall. The suburb is built-up rather than scenic, has no beach access, and its canopy cover of 23.7% gives it some greenery without making it feel especially leafy. Everyday amenity is modest, with walkability, retail and culture all at 2 out of 5, so this is not the kind of suburb where most buyers would expect a café-strip or walk-everywhere lifestyle. That said, some buyers will like Cartwright precisely because it feels straightforward and functional. The compromise is that the suburb lifestyle is more about practicality and local routine than charm or prestige. If you are searching what it is like to live in Cartwright, the answer is simple: it suits buyers who care more about usable housing and value than a highly curated suburb experience.
Is Cartwright NSW 2168 well connected for commuting?
Cartwright NSW 2168 is less convenient for commuting than many better-connected Sydney suburbs, although it is not completely cut off. The suburb has many bus services, which is the main transport strength, but there is no train, no metro, no light rail and no ferry service in the suburb itself. That shows up clearly in the commute times: the average trip to the Sydney CBD is about 80 minutes by public transport and around 40 minutes by car. For buyers asking about public transport or the commute to Sydney CBD from Cartwright, this is a bus-reliant suburb rather than a rail-based commuter hub. The trade-off is straightforward. Buyers who work locally, drive often, or do not need to be in the CBD every day may find Cartwright manageable. Buyers who want fast train access, multiple transport modes, or a simpler daily city commute may find the transport picture less appealing. Cartwright is more suitable for practical outer-suburban living than for buyers who want a seamless commuter suburb.
Who does Cartwright NSW 2168 suit best?
Cartwright NSW 2168 suits practical owner-occupiers and budget-conscious house buyers best, especially those who value land-based living over prestige positioning. The housing mix leans toward separate houses at 50%, with apartments at 25%, so it has more family-style stock than high-density apartment suburbs. The resident profile also points to a working suburb, with Labourers at 18.2%, Machinery Operators and Drivers at 16.9%, and Technicians and Trades Workers at 15.3% as the leading occupation groups. Median weekly personal income is $406 and median family income is $989, which reinforces Cartwright as a price-sensitive, practical market rather than an affluent one. The flip side is that Cartwright may suit executive buyers, prestige upgraders, or buyers chasing a high-amenity lifestyle less well, with managers and professionals making up only 13.2% of residents. A rental share of 52.8% also suggests a more active and mixed ownership base. For the right buyer, though, Cartwright can make sense as a straightforward suburb where entry price and house access matter more than status.
What are the pros and cons of living in Cartwright NSW 2168?
The main trade-off in Cartwright NSW 2168 is that buyers can access a more practical house-based suburb, but they give up some lifestyle amenity and transport convenience in return. On the plus side, Cartwright has a meaningful separate-house presence, many bus services, some tree cover, and school ratings that read strongly in the supplied data. For buyers who want a functional suburb in Sydney’s south-west with a grounded residential feel, those are real positives. It may particularly appeal to households focused on space, everyday usability and staying within budget. The compromise is that Cartwright is not especially strong on safety, walkability, retail or culture, all sitting at 2 out of 5, and the suburb does not have train, metro, light rail or ferry access. That means the pros and cons of living in Cartwright come down to priorities. Buyers wanting a polished lifestyle suburb may feel the limitations. Buyers who care more about value, houses and practicality may see those trade-offs as acceptable.
What are property prices like in Cartwright NSW 2168?
Property prices in Cartwright NSW 2168 look relatively affordable by Sydney house standards. In the recent six-month sales data supplied, houses recorded 7 sales with an average price of about $1.02 million and a median price of $1.00 million. The middle of the market appears fairly tight as well, with the 25th percentile at $990,000 and the 75th percentile at $1.00 million, while the top end of this sample reached $1.10 million. For buyers researching house prices in Cartwright or asking whether Cartwright is expensive, the short answer is that it sits at a more accessible end of Sydney’s detached-house market. What that suggests in practical terms is lower budget pressure than many middle-ring or prestige suburbs, especially for buyers who need a house rather than an apartment. The trade-off is that buyers are not paying for high-end amenity, premium transport links or a prestige lifestyle setting. Cartwright may offer better buying value, but that value comes with a more practical suburban experience.
