Concord NSW 2137 property reports

Concord NSW 2137

Suburb

Suburb summary

Concord, NSW 2137 is a family-oriented Inner West Sydney suburb beside the Parramatta River and creeks. Concord property market data shows strong house demand, with 47 house sales in the past 6 months and a median house price of $3,201,000, while apartments recorded 9 sales with a median price of $1,295,000. Concord has a population of 14,533, median age 41, average household size 2.9, and median weekly family income of $2,315. Housing is dominated by separate houses at 72%, with apartments at 16%. Buyers searching Concord NSW often value top-rated schools, many bus services, ferry access, and a typical CBD commute of 35 minutes by public transport.

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

$3.3M

Derived from sales

House sales

138

In past 12 months

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Pocket Price Map

Pocket price distribution map preview

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Apartment projects

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PROJECTS MAP

Apartment projects map preview

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Demographic info

Median age

43 years

Renters

20%

Top 3 occupations

Professionals30%
Managers20%
Clerical and Administrative Workers20%

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Living in Concord NSW 2137: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Concord NSW 2137 a good suburb for families?

Concord NSW 2137 is a strong suburb for families, especially for buyers who want a house-oriented area with solid schooling and a settled residential feel. The school picture is a real positive here, with both primary and secondary education rated 10 out of 10, while safety sits at 4 out of 5, which supports Concord’s reputation as a good suburb for families and good for kids. The housing mix also matters: around 72% of homes are separate houses and only about 16% are apartments, which usually suits buyers looking for more indoor and outdoor space. Family presence is visible in the age profile too, with children aged 0 to 4 at 5.3% and those aged 5 to 14 at 13.4%, plus an average household size of 2.9 people. The trade-off is price, because family-friendly housing in Concord can come at a high entry point, especially for freestanding homes.

What is it like to live in Concord NSW 2137?

Living in Concord NSW 2137 feels established, family-oriented and practical, with a calmer residential atmosphere than many busier Inner West locations. Concord sits in the Inner West & Inner West Fringe and its character reads as clearly family-oriented residential, which fits the day-to-day feel many buyers look for. Lifestyle-wise, it has a useful mix of convenience and amenity: walkability is 4 out of 5, retail is 4 out of 5, and culture is 3 out of 5, so daily errands and local services are fairly easy without the suburb feeling overly hectic. Its river and creek adjacency adds some natural appeal, although canopy cover is only 16.11%, so Concord does not read as especially leafy compared with greener parts of Sydney. Safety at 4 out of 5 helps the suburb feel comfortable for many households. The trade-off is that buyers wanting a highly vibrant café scene or a more urban buzz may find Concord more steady than exciting.

Is Concord NSW 2137 well connected for commuting?

Concord NSW 2137 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but the transport picture is mixed rather than exceptional. The suburb does not currently have its own train, metro or light rail service, which is an important limitation for buyers focused on rail-based commuting. That said, Concord is not cut off: bus services are strong, rated as many, and ferry access is available, which gives residents more than one public transport option. Average travel time to the Sydney CBD is about 35 minutes by public transport and 25 minutes by car, which is workable for many Inner West buyers. In practical terms, Concord can suit commuters who are comfortable using buses, ferries, or a mix of driving and public transport rather than walking straight to a station. The trade-off is convenience: compared with suburbs on direct rail lines, commuting from Concord may feel less simple and a bit more mode-dependent.

Who does Concord NSW 2137 suit best?

Concord NSW 2137 suits established families, upsizers and professional households best, particularly those looking for a house-focused Inner West suburb with a more settled demographic profile. The housing mix tells much of the story: about 72% of dwellings are separate houses, while apartments account for roughly 16%, so Concord is better aligned with buyers wanting more space than with those chasing dense urban apartment living. The resident profile also points to a stable, higher-skilled market, with managers and professionals making up about 45.9% of residents. The top occupation groups are professionals at 28.9%, managers at 16.9%, and clerical and administrative workers at 16.8%. Median weekly family income sits at $2,315 and the median age is 41, which reinforces Concord’s established, family-oriented buyer base. It may suit first-home buyers less well if they need a lower entry price or want a transport-heavy, apartment-led environment.

What are the pros and cons of living in Concord NSW 2137?

The main trade-off in Concord NSW 2137 is that buyers get strong family liveability and good day-to-day convenience, but not the same level of rail-based transport access or urban intensity as some other Inner West suburbs. On the plus side, Concord performs well in several areas that matter to owner-occupiers: safety is 4 out of 5, walkability is 4 out of 5, retail is 4 out of 5, and the suburb has a clear family-oriented residential character. Its house-heavy profile, river-adjacent setting and relatively low rental share of 24% also support a more settled feel. On the other hand, Concord has no train, metro or light rail in the suburb itself, so many commuters will rely on buses, ferry links or driving. Canopy cover at 16.11% also means it is not one of Sydney’s leafiest pockets. For buyers who prioritise schools, houses and a stable neighbourhood, those compromises may be well worth it.

What are property prices like in Concord NSW 2137?

Property prices in Concord NSW 2137 are expensive by normal Sydney buyer expectations, especially for houses. In the most recent six months of recorded sales, houses had a median price of $3.15 million across 38 sales, with the middle market broadly sitting between $2.8 million and $3.653 million. That places Concord firmly in the premium family-house bracket rather than the mainstream upgrader market. Apartments are meaningfully lower, with a median price of $1.65 million across 9 sales, which still suggests a fairly high entry point for unit buyers. In practical terms, buying property in Concord usually means paying up for a strong family position in the Inner West, with house stock particularly competitive because the suburb is heavily weighted toward separate homes. The trade-off is value versus access: buyers may get good liveability, schools and a settled streetscape, but they should expect real budget pressure compared with less tightly held suburbs farther out.