
Doonside NSW 2767
Suburb summary
Doonside, NSW 2767 is a Western Sydney suburb known for established multicultural residential living and strong house stock. Tool data shows a population of 13,451, median age 35, and median weekly family income of $1,425. Housing is dominated by separate houses at 96%, with apartments at 1%. Over the past 6 months, median sold prices were $1.13M for houses from 40 sales and $800K for apartments from 6 sales. Doonside has train access on the T1/T5 lines, many bus services, and CBD commute times of 50 minutes by public transport and 45 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
$1.1M
Derived from sales
House sales
97
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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202 popular houses in Doonside NSW 2767
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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24 popular apartments in Doonside NSW 2767
Demographic info
Median age
36 years
Renters
50%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Doonside NSW 2767: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Doonside NSW 2767 a good suburb for families?
Doonside NSW 2767 is a solid rather than standout option for families. The suburb has some genuine family foundations: children make up a meaningful share of the population, with about 6.5% aged 0 to 4 and 14% aged 5 to 14, the average household size is 3.1 people, and separate houses make up about 96% of homes. That housing mix matters because it gives many buyers a better chance of finding backyard-style family living than in denser apartment-heavy suburbs. School ratings are also a positive, with both primary and secondary education sitting at 8 out of 10. The main qualification is safety, which scores 2 out of 5, so buyers should treat Doonside as a practical family suburb rather than an especially calm or prestige family-friendly suburb. For households prioritising space, house stock and school access over polish or prestige, Doonside can still be a sensible family buy.
What is it like to live in Doonside NSW 2767?
Living in Doonside NSW 2767 feels established, practical and multicultural rather than polished or highly lifestyle-driven. It sits in Western Sydney and reads as an urban, built-up residential suburb with an everyday, local feel. That translates to a suburb where life is more about function than glamour: you are likely choosing Doonside for usable housing, community familiarity and day-to-day practicality, not for a village atmosphere, beach lifestyle or highly curated café scene. Retail and culture both score 3 out of 5, so there is some local amenity and community life without the suburb feeling like a major lifestyle destination. Walkability is only 2 out of 5 and canopy cover is 15.32%, which suggests a less leafy and less walk-everywhere experience than many buyers might hope for. In short, Doonside suits buyers who want a grounded suburban lifestyle and can accept a more built-up setting.
Is Doonside NSW 2767 well connected for commuting?
Doonside NSW 2767 is well connected for commuting by Western Sydney standards. The suburb has its own train access on the T1 and T5 lines, bus coverage is rated as many, and the average public transport commute to the Sydney CBD is about 50 minutes, with driving around 45 minutes. For buyers who need regular public transport, that is a meaningful plus because you are not relying solely on buses or long station transfers. The trade-off is that Doonside is not a short-hop inner-ring commute, so daily travel into the CBD still takes time and can feel substantial if you work standard office hours in the city. There is no metro, light rail or ferry service, so the transport mix is useful but not especially broad. Overall, Doonside is a good fit for commuters who want train-based access and can live with a medium-length trip rather than a fast city commute.
Who does Doonside NSW 2767 suit best?
Doonside NSW 2767 suits best buyers who want a house-led suburb with a practical budget entry point and everyday livability. With about 96% separate houses and only around 1% apartments, the suburb is much more aligned with buyers chasing land, multiple bedrooms and traditional suburban layouts than with apartment-first or downsizer living. The median age is 35, average household size is 3.1, and the rental share is about 43.6%, which points to a mixed owner-occupier and tenant market rather than a tightly held prestige enclave. Local occupations are led by clerical and administrative workers, labourers, and machinery operators and drivers, while median weekly personal income is $531 and median family income is $1,425. In buyer terms, Doonside tends to suit families, first-home buyers and practical upgraders more than prestige seekers. It may suit professionals too, but less so those wanting a highly walkable, boutique or executive-style suburb experience.
What are the pros and cons of living in Doonside NSW 2767?
The main trade-off in Doonside NSW 2767 is that you get strong house-based suburban practicality, but not a highly refined lifestyle setting. On the plus side, Doonside offers a rare 96% separate-house mix, train access on the T1 and T5 lines, many bus services, and school ratings of 8 out of 10 for both primary and secondary. Those are meaningful strengths for buyers who value space, transport and family function. The compromises are equally important to understand. Safety is 2 out of 5, walkability is 2 out of 5, and tree canopy sits at 15.32%, so Doonside is less suited to buyers chasing a peaceful, leafy, walk-to-everything environment. Retail and culture both score 3 out of 5, which is serviceable rather than destination-level. For the right buyer, especially one focused on house stock and practicality, those trade-offs may be entirely acceptable.
What are property prices like in Doonside NSW 2767?
Property prices in Doonside NSW 2767 are relatively affordable for Sydney houses, while apartments appear limited in number and more variable. In the past six months, 36 houses were recorded with a median price of about $1,120,800, an average of roughly $1,152,927, and a typical middle range from around $1,055,000 to $1,220,000. That suggests Doonside house prices are still meaningful in absolute terms, but they remain more accessible than many higher-priced Sydney house markets, especially for buyers who want land and family-sized accommodation. The apartment sample is much smaller, with only 5 recorded sales and a median of $800,000, so buyers should treat that figure with caution rather than as a deep unit-market benchmark. In practical terms, buying property in Doonside can offer better house value than many parts of Sydney, but the trade-off is accepting a more functional, less prestige-led suburb profile.
