Ingleside NSW 2101 property reports

Ingleside NSW 2101

Suburb

Suburb summary

Ingleside NSW 2101 is a Northern Beaches suburb known for semi-rural residential living beside bushland and national park areas. It has 974 residents across 18.0872 sq km, low population density of 53.85 people per sq km, and 100% separate houses, making it appealing for buyers searching Ingleside houses, acreage lifestyle, and quiet family living. Median age is 44, average household size is 3.1, and median weekly family income is $2,329. The suburb has 40.39% canopy cover, safety 4/5, primary school rating 5/5, secondary 4/5, many bus services, and nearby beach access. In the past 6 months, 1 house sale recorded a median price of $11,000,000.

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Demographic info

Median age

44 years

Renters

30%

Top 3 occupations

Managers20%
Professionals20%
Technicians and Trades Workers20%

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Living in Ingleside NSW 2101: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Ingleside NSW 2101 a good suburb for families?

Ingleside NSW 2101 is a solid suburb for families who want space, a quieter semi-rural setting, and access to well-regarded schools. The family case is supported by very strong school ratings, with primary at 10 out of 10 and secondary at 8 out of 10, plus a good safety score of 4 out of 5. Housing is also strongly family-oriented because separate houses make up 100% of the local stock, apartments are effectively absent, and the average household size is 3.1 people, which points to larger home living. Children are certainly part of the suburb mix too, with around 3.9% aged 0 to 4 and 13.4% aged 5 to 14. The trade-off is convenience. Ingleside is not a walkable, urban family-friendly suburb in the usual sense, so buyers may give up easy access to shops, transport, and everyday errands in exchange for land, privacy, and a more natural setting.

What is it like to live in Ingleside NSW 2101?

Living in Ingleside NSW 2101 feels semi-rural, spacious, and nature-oriented rather than urban or village-like. The suburb sits in the Northern Beaches region and is defined by a semi-rural residential character with bushland and national park surrounds, which helps explain its strong canopy cover of 40.39%. In everyday terms, that means many buyers will experience Ingleside as open, greener, and more private than denser Sydney suburbs. Safety is also relatively reassuring at 4 out of 5, which adds to the appeal for households wanting a calmer home base. At the same time, the lifestyle is not especially convenient on foot. Walkability is just 1 out of 5, retail is 1 out of 5, and culture is 2 out of 5, so Ingleside is less about cafés, shopping strips, and spontaneous errands, and more about space, quiet, and a bush-edge setting. That trade-off will suit some buyers far more than others.

Is Ingleside NSW 2101 well connected for commuting?

Ingleside NSW 2101 is less convenient for commuting than many more urban Sydney suburbs, although it is still workable for buyers who are comfortable relying on buses and driving. There is no train, no metro, and no light rail in Ingleside, and ferry access is also not part of the current transport picture. Bus coverage is better, with many bus services available, but the suburb still leans car-dependent in practical day-to-day living. The average trip to the Sydney CBD is around 90 minutes by public transport and about 45 minutes by car, which makes the commute manageable for some but not especially easy. For buyers asking whether Ingleside is good for commuters, the honest answer is mixed at best. It can suit people who work remotely, commute less often, or prioritise space over speed, but daily CBD commuters will need to accept longer travel times and fewer transport mode choices.

Who does Ingleside NSW 2101 suit best?

Ingleside NSW 2101 suits best buyers who want a large-home, lower-density lifestyle and are happy to trade convenience for space, privacy, and a more natural setting. The housing mix is very clear: separate houses account for 100% of homes, so Ingleside naturally appeals more to families, upsizers, and buyers who do not want apartment living. The suburb also has a relatively mature profile, with a median age of 44, and a moderate-to-strong professional and established-household base, including about 34.7% managers and professionals overall. Top occupation groups include trades, professionals, and managers, which suggests a practical but relatively established owner-occupier market. Median family income of $2,329 per week supports that picture. Ingleside may suit apartment-focused buyers, first-home buyers chasing convenience, or highly transit-dependent households less well. It is a better fit for people who value land, detached housing, and a slower suburban rhythm over a walk-to-everything lifestyle.

What are the pros and cons of living in Ingleside NSW 2101?

The main trade-off in Ingleside NSW 2101 is simple: you gain space, greenery, and a more private bushland setting, but you give up a lot of everyday convenience. On the plus side, Ingleside offers a distinctive Northern Beaches lifestyle with a semi-rural feel, strong canopy cover at 40.39%, bushland and national park adjacency, a safety rating of 4 out of 5, and a housing mix made entirely of separate houses. For buyers who want breathing room rather than density, that is a real advantage. On the downside, walkability is only 1 out of 5, retail is 1 out of 5, and the suburb has no train, metro, or light rail, so daily life usually involves more driving and more planning. That matters most for commuters, downsizers wanting convenience, and buyers who enjoy lively local amenity. Even so, Ingleside can still be an excellent fit for the right buyer, especially if peace, land, and house-based living come first.

What are property prices like in Ingleside NSW 2101?

Property prices in Ingleside NSW 2101 look expensive to premium for Sydney buyers, although the recent sales sample is very small. Over the past six months, the available house sales data shows just 2 recorded house sales, with a median price of $4.3 million, an average of $7.65 million, and a range from $4.3 million to $11 million. That spread suggests Ingleside can include very high-value homes, and it also means buyers should be careful about treating one figure as the whole suburb story when turnover is limited. In practical terms, buying property in Ingleside is likely to be a higher-budget exercise focused on detached housing rather than entry-level options, because the suburb is entirely house-based and has no meaningful apartment market in the current data. The trade-off is that buyers are paying for land, privacy, and a distinctive semi-rural Northern Beaches setting rather than walkable convenience or fast rail access.