
Connells Point NSW 2221
Suburb summary
Connells Point NSW 2221 is a waterside St George suburb in southern Sydney known for house-focused living and a quiet bayside residential feel. The population is 2,829, median age 42, and average household size 3.1. Separate houses make up 100% of homes, with no apartments recorded in the locality profile. Median weekly personal income is $850 and family income is $2,528. Over the past 6 months, median house price was $2.53M from 10 sales. Connells Point offers strong school ratings, solid safety, many buses, river or creek proximity, and around 45 minutes to the Sydney CBD 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
$2.7M
Derived from sales
House sales
29
In past 12 months
Sign in to view:
Pocket Price Map

Explore higher and lower-priced pockets across the suburb.
78 popular houses in Connells Point NSW 2221
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.
18 popular apartments in Connells Point NSW 2221
Demographic info
Median age
43 years
Renters
10%
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 Connells Point NSW 2221: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Connells Point NSW 2221 a good suburb for families?
Connells Point NSW 2221 is a strong suburb for families, especially for buyers who want a house-based area with a settled residential feel. The schooling indicators are excellent, with both primary and secondary education rated 10 out of 10, and safety also sits at a solid 4 out of 5, which gives family buyers some real confidence around schools and day-to-day liveability. The housing mix is also very family-oriented, with separate houses making up 100% of the dwelling stock and an average household size of 3.1, which points to a suburb that is built more for households than compact apartment living. Children are clearly part of the suburb profile too, with around 13.9% of residents aged 5 to 14. The trade-off is that Connells Point is not the cheapest family suburb, and it is not especially walk-to-everything convenient. That means it tends to suit buyers who prioritise space, schooling and a quieter house environment over affordability or inner-city style convenience.
What is it like to live in Connells Point NSW 2221?
Living in Connells Point NSW 2221 feels established, residential and quietly waterside rather than busy or highly urban. It sits in the St George region and has a bayside residential character, with river or creek adjacency adding to the lifestyle appeal. In everyday terms, that usually means a calmer suburban setting with pleasant outlooks and a more relaxed rhythm than denser town-centre locations. Safety is a solid 4 out of 5, and walkability is 3 out of 5, so the suburb feels reasonably easy to move around locally without being a full walk-everywhere environment. Tree canopy cover is 21.17%, which gives some greenery, though not enough to call it especially leafy. Culture is 3 out of 5, suggesting a steady, liveable suburb rather than a high-energy destination. The trade-off is convenience. Retail is only 1 out of 5, so Connells Point lifestyle tends to work better for buyers who are happy to drive for a broader shopping or dining run rather than expecting a buzzing local strip outside the door.
Is Connells Point NSW 2221 well connected for commuting?
Connells Point NSW 2221 is mixed rather than truly well connected for commuting. It does not have train, metro or light rail service in the suburb itself, so public transport access relies mainly on buses, and bus coverage is rated as many rather than limited. That keeps the suburb workable for commuters, but not as seamless as suburbs with direct rail options. The average commute to the Sydney CBD is about 45 minutes by public transport and around 30 minutes by car, which is reasonable for many buyers in the southern part of Sydney but not especially fast by metro or train-line standards. The upside is that Connells Point is not cut off, and driving times are fairly manageable for a suburb with a residential waterside setting. The limitation is choice: buyers who want a one-seat train ride or multiple transport modes may find it less convenient. Connells Point is best suited to people who are comfortable using buses, driving, or combining the two depending on the day.
Who does Connells Point NSW 2221 suit best?
Connells Point NSW 2221 suits established families, upsizers and professional households best, particularly those looking for a full house suburb rather than an apartment market. The housing profile is very clear: separate houses account for 100% of the stock, with no apartment share in the suburb data, so buyers coming here are usually choosing space, privacy and a more traditional residential setting. The resident profile also leans toward established working households, with professionals making up 28.33% of occupations, managers 17.66%, and clerical and administrative workers 17.23%. Around 46% of residents are managers and professionals overall, and the median family income of $2,528 per week supports the picture of a relatively stable, higher-earning owner-occupier area. The median age is 42, which also fits a mature family-oriented suburb. The trade-off is that Connells Point may suit first-home buyers, renters or buyers wanting apartment-style entry pricing less well. If you want lower maintenance, walk-to-shops convenience, or a more mixed housing market, other suburbs may offer a better fit.
What are the pros and cons of living in Connells Point NSW 2221?
The main trade-off in Connells Point NSW 2221 is that you get strong family liveability and house-based space, but you give up some transport and retail convenience. On the plus side, Connells Point offers a safe, established residential environment with safety rated 4 out of 5, excellent school ratings, a completely separate-house housing mix, and a river or creek-adjacent setting that adds lifestyle appeal. Rental share is low at about 9%, which often points to a more settled owner-occupied feel. For buyers wanting a suburban house market with a mature local profile, those are meaningful strengths. On the other hand, Connells Point is not a suburb where you get rail-based commuting or a major local shopping scene. Walkability is a middling 3 out of 5 and retail is only 1 out of 5, so daily life is more car-and-errands oriented than village-like. That matters most to buyers who value easy public transport and walkable amenity. For the right buyer, though, the quieter residential feel is exactly the point.
What are property prices like in Connells Point NSW 2221?
Property prices in Connells Point NSW 2221 are expensive to premium by Sydney buyer expectations, especially for houses. In the most recent six-month sales data, houses had a median sale price of $2.5 million across 10 sales, with the upper end reaching $6.7 million. That tells buyers straight away that buying property in Connells Point usually means a serious family-house budget rather than an entry-level purchase. Apartments are a smaller part of the recent market, with only 3 sales, but the median apartment price was still about $1.236 million, so even the lower entry point sits well above what many buyers would consider affordable. In practical terms, Connells Point house prices reflect its house-only character, strong school appeal, safety profile and waterside residential setting. The trade-off is budget pressure: you are paying for space and suburb quality, but not getting the same level of walkable retail or rail transport that some other premium-priced suburbs offer.
