
Kirkham NSW 2570
Suburb summary
Kirkham NSW 2570 is a residential suburb in Sydney’s South West & Macarthur region, popular in searches for Kirkham NSW suburb profile, property market, family living, and schools. It spans 4.22 km², has a population of 699, median age 40, average household size 3.6, and 100% separate houses. Median weekly personal income is $928 and family income is $2,926. The area is mainly Australian-born, with Australian and English ancestry most common. Kirkham offers many bus services, nearby train access, solid primary and secondary education ratings, good safety, and a CBD commute of about 110 minutes by public transport or 55 minutes driving.
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
$2.6M
Derived from sales
House sales
1
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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12 popular houses in Kirkham NSW 2570
Apartment projects
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Demographic info
Median age
45 years
Renters
0%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Kirkham NSW 2570: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Kirkham NSW 2570 a good suburb for families?
Kirkham NSW 2570 is a strong suburb for families, especially for buyers who want a house-focused area with solid schooling and a settled family profile. The education ratings are very strong at 8 out of 10 for both primary and secondary schooling, safety sits at 4 out of 5, and the suburb has a notably high share of school-aged children, with about 17.2% aged 5 to 14. Younger children are present too, and the average household size of 3.6 points to larger family households rather than small singles or transient renters. Housing is a big part of the family appeal here as well, with separate houses making up 100% of the local stock and no meaningful apartment presence. That gives Kirkham a practical edge for buyers wanting more internal space, yard space, and easier multigenerational living. The trade-off is that family convenience is not the same as urban convenience, so buyers may get more space and a calmer setup but give up some walkable amenity and faster day-to-day access.
What is it like to live in Kirkham NSW 2570?
Living in Kirkham NSW 2570 feels established, residential, and quietly suburban rather than lively or highly urbanised. It sits in the South West & Macarthur region and reads as a place designed more for home life than for café hopping or walk-everywhere convenience. The suburb’s retail and walkability both rate just 1 out of 5, while culture is 2 out of 5, so the lifestyle here is better suited to buyers who prioritise space, routine, and a house-based lifestyle over buzz and spontaneity. Safety is a stronger point at 4 out of 5, which supports a more comfortable everyday feel for many households. Kirkham does not present as leafy or coastal, and there is no beach access, so the appeal is more about straightforward suburban living than scenery or destination lifestyle. For the right buyer that works well, but those wanting vibrant streets, strong local shopping, or a village atmosphere may find Kirkham a little quiet and car-dependent.
Is Kirkham NSW 2570 well connected for commuting?
Kirkham NSW 2570 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s easiest public transport suburbs. The suburb has many bus services and nearby train access rather than a station directly in the suburb, with the rail connection linked to the T8 corridor at Narellan. There is no metro, no light rail, and no ferry, so the transport picture is quite focused rather than broad. On current figures, the average commute to the Sydney CBD is about 110 minutes by public transport and 55 minutes by car, which makes driving the more practical option for many workers. That means Kirkham can still suit commuters, especially those with flexible schedules, local jobs, or who do not need to be in the CBD every day. The trade-off is clear though: buyers get a more spacious suburban setting, but they should expect a longer trip into central Sydney and more reliance on buses and cars than in inner or rail-heavy suburbs.
Who does Kirkham NSW 2570 suit best?
Kirkham NSW 2570 suits family buyers, upsizers, and established households who want a full-house environment rather than apartment living. The housing mix is very clear, with 100% separate houses and no apartment share, so buyers looking for land, multiple bedrooms, and room for children or extended family are likely to see the suburb’s appeal straight away. The average household size is 3.6, rental share is very low at around 3.7%, and the median family income of $2,926 per week points to a fairly stable owner-occupier profile. Professionally, the suburb leans toward managers and professionals, with clerical and administrative workers also well represented, which often aligns with settled, longer-term owner demand. Kirkham may suit buyers who value space and a more private suburban rhythm. It may suit downsizers, first-home buyers on tighter budgets, or apartment-oriented professionals less well, especially if they want stronger walkability, more retail, or a faster CBD commute.
What are the pros and cons of living in Kirkham NSW 2570?
The main trade-off in Kirkham NSW 2570 is simple: you get family-scale housing and a settled suburban feel, but you give up a fair bit of urban convenience. On the plus side, Kirkham has a strong safety rating of 4 out of 5, an entirely separate-house housing mix, low rental turnover, and a household profile that feels stable and established. For buyers wanting a traditional house suburb with room to spread out, those are meaningful advantages. The downside is that daily convenience is weaker. Walkability is 1 out of 5, retail is 1 out of 5, culture is 2 out of 5, and public transport to the CBD is relatively long at around 110 minutes. There is bus access and nearby train connectivity, so it is not disconnected, but it is not a walkable commuter hub either. Buyers who care most about space, schooling and a quieter residential setting may be happy with that compromise, while lifestyle-driven inner-city buyers may not be.
What are property prices like in Kirkham NSW 2570?
Property prices in Kirkham NSW 2570 are likely to sit in the expensive category for many Sydney buyers, mainly because this is a pure house market rather than a mixed suburb with apartment entry points. Recent suburb-level sales history did not return enough volume to quote a reliable current median, which usually points to a tightly held and lower-turnover market rather than a broad, frequently traded one. In practical terms, buying property in Kirkham is more likely to be a house-and-land decision than a price-shopping exercise across different dwelling types, because the suburb’s housing stock is entirely separate houses. That can appeal to family buyers looking for more space and a stable owner-occupier setting, but it also means less flexibility for buyers hoping to enter via units or lower-maintenance stock. The trade-off is that you are typically paying for house-based living and family suitability, while accepting fewer cheaper entry options and a smaller recent sales sample to benchmark against.
