Hinchinbrook NSW 2168 property reports

Hinchinbrook NSW 2168

Suburb

Suburb summary

Hinchinbrook, NSW 2168 is a residential suburb in South West & Macarthur, Sydney, with 11,222 residents across 3.2282 sq km. Popular for family living and Hinchinbrook real estate searches, it is overwhelmingly house-based, with 2,629 separate houses and houses making up 99% of dwellings. Over the past 6 months, house sales reached 30, with a median sold price of $1.10M. The suburb has a median age of 33, average household size of 3.7, and median weekly family income of $1,712. Public transport to the Sydney CBD averages 100 minutes, while driving averages 40 minutes.

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

$1.2M

Derived from sales

House sales

75

In past 12 months

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Pocket Price Map

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Explore higher and lower-priced pockets across the suburb.

Demographic info

Median age

35 years

Renters

20%

Top 3 occupations

Clerical and Administrative Workers20%
Managers10%
Professionals10%

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Living in Hinchinbrook NSW 2168: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Hinchinbrook NSW 2168 a good suburb for families?

Hinchinbrook NSW 2168 looks like a strong option for families, especially buyers who want a house-oriented suburb with solid schooling access. The clearest positive is the family setup of the area: separate houses make up 99% of homes, the average household size is 3.7 people, and children are a meaningful part of the population, with 6.2% aged 0 to 4 and 15.2% aged 5 to 14. School-related indicators are also a standout, with both primary and secondary education rated 6 out of 5, which points to unusually strong education appeal for family buyers focused on schools and long-term suitability. The trade-off is that Hinchinbrook is not especially strong on safety by rating, sitting at 2 out of 5, so it would be more accurate to call it a practical family suburb rather than a calm prestige enclave. For buyers who prioritise larger homes, room for kids, and access to schools over buzz or inner-city convenience, Hinchinbrook is still a very solid family-friendly suburb.

What is it like to live in Hinchinbrook NSW 2168?

Living in Hinchinbrook NSW 2168 feels practical, suburban, and house-focused rather than trendy or highly walkable. It sits in Sydney’s South West & Macarthur region and reads as a straightforward residential suburb with an urban, built-up setting. That translates into a lifestyle centred more on home, family routines, and local driving than on café strips, beaches, or a walk-everywhere daily pattern. The data supports that feel: walkability is 2 out of 5, retail is 2 out of 5, culture is 2 out of 5, and tree canopy cover is only 12.14%, so Hinchinbrook is not the kind of suburb buyers usually choose for village atmosphere or leafy streets. That said, many buyers like Hinchinbrook precisely because it offers space and a grounded suburban rhythm. The compromise is that the lifestyle is less polished and less vibrant than some higher-profile Sydney suburbs. If you want a functional family base with a traditional house-suburb feel, Hinchinbrook may suit you well.

Is Hinchinbrook NSW 2168 well connected for commuting?

Hinchinbrook NSW 2168 is mixed rather than especially well connected for commuting. The suburb has many bus services, which helps with day-to-day movement, but it does not currently have train, metro, light rail, or ferry access in the suburb itself. That shapes the commute picture quite clearly: the average drive to the Sydney CBD is about 40 minutes, while public transport averages around 100 minutes. For buyers who commute by car or travel more locally across South West Sydney, that may feel manageable. For daily CBD commuters relying on public transport, it is a weaker setup than rail-serviced suburbs. In practical terms, Hinchinbrook works better for buyers whose work is spread across the wider western and south-western corridor, or for households with flexible travel patterns. The trade-off is reliance on buses and driving, with less mode choice than many established commuter suburbs. So yes, commuting is possible from Hinchinbrook, but convenience depends heavily on where you work and how often you need to be in the city.

Who does Hinchinbrook NSW 2168 suit best?

Hinchinbrook NSW 2168 suits family buyers, upgrader households, and owner-occupiers who want a detached home environment more than an urban lifestyle suburb. The housing mix is decisive: 99% of homes are separate houses and apartments are effectively absent, which means buyers choosing Hinchinbrook are usually looking for land, internal space, and a suburban setup rather than compact living. The average household size is 3.7, the median age is 33, and the area has a relatively moderate rental share at 20.5%, all of which suggest a settled, family-oriented community rather than a transient one. The resident profile also points to a practical working suburb, with clerical and administrative workers, trades, and professionals all well represented. Median weekly family income is $1,712, which suggests buyers here are often balancing space and affordability carefully. Hinchinbrook may suit apartment buyers, downsizers, or people wanting a highly walkable professional hub less well. It is strongest for households that value room and function over prestige or inner-city convenience.

What are the pros and cons of living in Hinchinbrook NSW 2168?

The main trade-off in Hinchinbrook NSW 2168 is that you get genuine suburban house living and family practicality, but you give up some convenience, atmosphere, and transport ease. On the plus side, Hinchinbrook is overwhelmingly a detached-house suburb, which is increasingly hard to find across Sydney. That matters for buyers wanting more bedrooms, backyard space, larger family households, and a setting that feels more residential than high-density. The suburb also scores very strongly on school-related measures, which adds to its appeal for buyers with children. The compromise is that everyday lifestyle convenience is more limited. Walkability, retail, culture, and safety all sit at 2 out of 5, tree cover is modest, and the suburb is urban and built-up rather than leafy or scenic. Public transport to the CBD is also relatively slow compared with rail-linked suburbs. Buyers who care most about cafés, walkable amenities, or fast city access will notice those limitations. Still, for the right buyer focused on house space and family function, Hinchinbrook can make good practical sense.

What are property prices like in Hinchinbrook NSW 2168?

Property prices in Hinchinbrook NSW 2168 look mid-range to moderately expensive by Sydney house standards, but still more accessible than many prestige family suburbs. In the most recent six months of sales, houses had a median price of about $1.082 million from 23 recorded sales, with the middle market broadly sitting between $955,000 and $1.192 million. That suggests Hinchinbrook house prices are geared toward buyers who want a full house and land package without stepping into Sydney’s premium upper tier. Recent apartment data is limited, but the small number of unit sales showed a median around $900,000. For buyers, that pricing tells a clear story. Hinchinbrook is not a bargain-basement suburb, yet it still offers detached-home access at a lower entry point than many school-focused or prestige-led areas. The trade-off is that you are paying for house stock and family practicality rather than top-tier transport, walkability, or lifestyle amenity. For buyers prioritising space over polish, Hinchinbrook pricing may feel relatively reasonable.