Croydon Park NSW 2133 property reports

Croydon Park NSW 2133

Suburb

Suburb summary

Croydon Park, NSW 2133 is a multicultural Inner West suburb in Sydney with 11,012 residents, median age 39, and average household size 2.8. Popular with buyers searching Croydon Park real estate, Croydon Park houses for sale, and Croydon Park suburb profile, it offers many bus services, a train station, and CBD commute times of about 40 minutes by public transport or 25 minutes by car. Over the past 6 months, median sold prices were $2.10M for houses and $780,000 for apartments, with 21 house sales and 20 apartment sales. Housing is led by separate houses, with safety rated 4/5 and primary education rated 5/5.

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

$2.2M

Derived from sales

House sales

76

In past 12 months

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Pocket Price Map

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Apartment projects

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PROJECTS MAP

Apartment projects map preview

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Demographic info

Median age

41 years

Renters

30%

Top 3 occupations

Professionals30%
Clerical and Administrative Workers20%
Managers10%

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Living in Croydon Park NSW 2133: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Croydon Park NSW 2133 a good suburb for families?

Croydon Park NSW 2133 is a solid rather than standout option for families. The suburb shows some genuine family markers: children make up a meaningful share of the population, with about 5.9% aged 0 to 4 and 12.5% aged 5 to 14, and the average household size of 2.8 suggests plenty of family households rather than a purely singles-and-couples market. Safety also rates a respectable 4 out of 5, which supports day-to-day family confidence. Where Croydon Park becomes more mixed is schooling and housing format. The primary school rating sits at 1 out of 5, while the suburb has a moderate housing split, with 48% separate houses and 27% apartments, so it is not purely a large-block family-house suburb. For buyers wanting a practical Inner West family-friendly suburb with decent safety and established residential streets, Croydon Park can work well, but school-focused buyers may want to assess their exact schooling options carefully.

What is it like to live in Croydon Park NSW 2133?

Living in Croydon Park NSW 2133 feels practical, established and multicultural rather than flashy or highly polished. As part of the Inner West & Inner West Fringe, Croydon Park has an urban, built-up setting with a multicultural suburban character, which usually translates into a lived-in neighbourhood feel, everyday convenience and a broad mix of residents. Walkability, retail and culture all sit at 3 out of 5, so the lifestyle is balanced rather than exceptional: you can get daily needs handled locally, but it is not a walk-everywhere village centre or a major lifestyle hotspot. Safety is stronger at 4 out of 5, which adds confidence for owner-occupiers. The trade-off is that Croydon Park is not especially leafy, with canopy cover at 14.53%, and it does not have beach access, so buyers looking for a greener or more scenic suburb may find it a bit more built-up than they want.

Is Croydon Park NSW 2133 well connected for commuting?

Croydon Park NSW 2133 is reasonably well connected for commuting, especially for buyers comfortable using nearby stations and buses. The suburb does not have its own train station inside the suburb boundary, but train access is nearby through Croydon and Ashfield on the T2 and T3 lines, and bus coverage is rated as many. That gives Croydon Park a workable public transport profile for commuting to the Sydney CBD, with an average public transport trip of around 40 minutes. Driving is quicker at about 25 minutes on average, which will appeal to buyers whose work patterns are car-based or spread across different parts of Sydney. The trade-off is that Croydon Park is not one of those suburbs with every transport mode at your doorstep: there is no metro, no light rail and no ferry service, so convenience is good but not top tier. For many Inner West commuters, though, it remains a very manageable base.

Who does Croydon Park NSW 2133 suit best?

Croydon Park NSW 2133 suits buyers who want an established Inner West suburb with a balanced residential feel, especially families, upgraders and professionals who do not need a fully premium postcode. The housing mix helps explain that. Separate houses account for 48% of homes, while apartments are 27%, so the suburb still offers a meaningful house market without feeling exclusively detached or prestige-driven. Around 32.2% of homes are rented, which points to a mixed owner-occupier and tenant market rather than an extremely tightly held one. The resident profile also leans toward working professionals, with professionals at 26.7%, managers at 12.6%, and managers and professionals together at 39.3%. The median family income of $1,906 a week and median age of 39 suggest stable family and established household demand. It may suit buyers less well if they want a highly affluent prestige enclave, a very youthful apartment hub, or a suburb dominated by large family homes.

What are the pros and cons of living in Croydon Park NSW 2133?

The main trade-off in Croydon Park NSW 2133 is that you get a solid Inner West lifestyle and reasonable convenience without the full walkable, leafy or rail-at-the-door experience of some neighbouring suburbs. On the plus side, Croydon Park offers a practical urban setting, good safety at 4 out of 5, many bus services, nearby train access and a manageable CBD commute of around 40 minutes by public transport or 25 minutes by car. The suburb also has a balanced housing mix, which can make it feel more accessible to a wider range of buyers than tightly held blue-chip areas. On the downside, walkability, retail and culture all sit at 3 out of 5, so buyers should expect convenience rather than standout lifestyle energy. Tree canopy is also relatively low at 14.53%, which means Croydon Park feels more built-up than leafy. That compromise matters most to buyers prioritising atmosphere and streetscape, but less so for buyers focused on practicality and position.

What are property prices like in Croydon Park NSW 2133?

Property prices in Croydon Park NSW 2133 sit in the expensive category for many Sydney buyers, especially for houses, though apartments provide a more accessible entry point. Over the most recent six months of sales, houses had a median price of $2.03 million, with 22 recorded sales, while apartments had a median price of $733,000 across 19 sales. That pricing tells buyers that Croydon Park is not a budget house market, even if it may still compare more favourably than some premium Inner West pockets. For family buyers chasing a house, budget pressure is real and competition is likely to be strongest for well-positioned homes around the suburb median. Apartments, by contrast, create a much lower entry point for buyers wanting access to Croydon Park and its broader Inner West setting. The trade-off is clear: buyers pay more for house-style space, while apartment buyers gain affordability but usually give up land and some long-term flexibility.