
Cremorne Point NSW 2090
Suburb summary
Cremorne Point, NSW 2090 is a prestigious Lower North Shore suburb in Sydney, known for harbourfront living, waterfront views and a quiet residential enclave feel. It covers 0.4278 km², has a population of 2,409, median age 43, and population density of 5,631.14 people/km². Housing is dominated by apartments, with 821 apartments and 141 houses. In the past 6 months, median apartment price was $1.49M from 8 sales, while 1 house sold at $9.84M. The suburb has strong school ratings, safety, ferry access, many bus services, and average CBD commute times of 40 minutes by public transport or 20 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
$5M
Derived from sales
House sales
3
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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28 popular houses in Cremorne Point NSW 2090
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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94 popular apartments in Cremorne Point NSW 2090
Demographic info
Median age
47 years
Renters
50%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Cremorne Point NSW 2090: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Cremorne Point NSW 2090 a good suburb for families?
Cremorne Point NSW 2090 is a solid rather than standout option for families. The strongest positives are schooling and safety: both primary and secondary education ratings are 10 out of 10, and safety sits at 4 out of 5, which gives buyers a reassuring base if schools and day-to-day comfort matter. There is also a meaningful family presence, with children aged 0 to 4 making up 5.3% of residents and ages 5 to 14 at 8.6%, so families are clearly part of the local mix. That said, Cremorne Point is not a classic large-house family suburb. Average household size is 2.1, only 9% of homes are separate houses, and 53% are apartments, so buyers wanting a backyard, more internal space, or a lower-density feel may find the housing stock restrictive. For families happy to trade house size for a premium harbour-side lifestyle, Cremorne Point can still be a very appealing family-friendly suburb.
What is it like to live in Cremorne Point NSW 2090?
Living in Cremorne Point NSW 2090 feels calm, established and distinctly harbour-side rather than busy or urban-intense. The suburb sits in the Lower North Shore & Ryde Corridor and reads as a harbour residential enclave, which fits the data well: waterfront environmental features, 34.14% canopy cover, safety at 4 out of 5, and a moderate culture score of 3 out of 5. In everyday terms, Cremorne Point lifestyle is likely to suit buyers who value scenic surroundings, a quieter residential setting and a prestige-leaning atmosphere more than constant activity. The trade-off is convenience on foot. Walkability is 3 out of 5, which is decent without being walk-everywhere easy, and retail is only 1 out of 5, so this is not the kind of suburb where daily shopping and café variety are the main draw. Buyers choosing Cremorne Point are generally paying for setting, harbour character and calmness, not for a bustling village strip.
Is Cremorne Point NSW 2090 well connected for commuting?
Cremorne Point NSW 2090 is reasonably well connected for commuting, especially if you value buses and ferry access over direct train service. The suburb does not have its own train station, and metro access is nearby rather than in the suburb itself, with M1 access around Victoria Cross. There is no light rail, but bus service is rated many and ferry access is available, which helps balance the transport picture. Commute times are fairly practical by Sydney standards, with public transport to the CBD around 40 minutes and driving around 20 minutes on average. That makes Cremorne Point a workable choice for CBD-based buyers, particularly those comfortable mixing ferry or bus into their routine. The trade-off is that it is not as simple as living right on a train line. If you want the easiest possible rail commute or multiple high-frequency transport modes at your doorstep, Cremorne Point may feel a little less seamless than some other Lower North Shore suburbs.
Who does Cremorne Point NSW 2090 suit best?
Cremorne Point NSW 2090 suits affluent professionals, established couples, downsizers and lifestyle-focused buyers best. The resident profile is quite clear: 68.3% of workers are managers or professionals, the top occupation group is Professionals at 44.2%, followed by Managers at 24.0%, and median weekly personal income is $1,462 while median family income is $3,731. The median age is 43, which suggests a mature, settled buyer pool rather than a very youthful one. Housing mix matters here too. With only 9% separate houses and 53% apartments, Cremorne Point is better aligned with buyers who prioritise harbour position, prestige and manageable living over large family homes on generous blocks. The 46.0% rental share also points to a mixed ownership base rather than an ultra-tightly held detached-house market. It may suit big-house family buyers less well, especially those wanting four bedrooms, larger land, or a more traditional backyard-oriented family suburb.
What are the pros and cons of living in Cremorne Point NSW 2090?
The main trade-off in Cremorne Point NSW 2090 is that you get a premium harbour-side lifestyle, but you give up some everyday convenience and housing space. On the plus side, Cremorne Point performs well where many buyers care most: safety is 4 out of 5, the setting is waterfront, ferry access is available, buses are plentiful, and the suburb has a calm residential character that feels more refined than hectic. School ratings are also exceptionally strong, which adds confidence for education-focused buyers. The compromise is practical rather than dramatic. Retail is only 1 out of 5, walkability is 3 out of 5, there is no train station in the suburb, and the housing mix is heavily weighted away from separate houses. That means buyers may need to accept more apartment living, less local shopping convenience, and a slightly less direct commute setup. For buyers who care most about harbour atmosphere and lifestyle prestige, those compromises may feel very reasonable.
What are property prices like in Cremorne Point NSW 2090?
Property prices in Cremorne Point NSW 2090 are expensive to premium by Sydney standards. Recent sales evidence shows apartments had a median price of $3.05 million across 7 sales, with a broad range from $770,000 to $8.55 million, which suggests the unit market spans from smaller entry-level stock to very high-end harbour-facing apartments. Houses sit in a very different bracket again, with 1 recorded house sale at $9.84 million, reinforcing how tightly held and premium detached homes are in Cremorne Point. In practical buyer terms, buying property in Cremorne Point usually means paying a substantial premium for harbour position, prestige and lifestyle rather than land value alone. Apartments are likely to be the more realistic entry path for most buyers, while houses are clearly scarce and costly. The trade-off is straightforward: you are paying up for location and exclusivity, so buyers focused on space or value may find better price-to-size outcomes elsewhere.
