Kurraba Point NSW 2089 property reports

Kurraba Point NSW 2089

Suburb

Suburb summary

Kurraba Point NSW 2089 is a harbourside Lower North Shore suburb in Sydney, popular for waterfront living, ferry access and apartment buyers. It has 1,521 residents across 0.2349 sq km, median age 40, median weekly personal income $1,572 and family income $3,666. Housing is apartment-led, with 542 apartments versus 96 houses, and 38% old units. Safety is rated 4/5, walkability 3/5, with many buses, ferry service, metro access and a 25-minute public transport commute to the Sydney CBD. In the past 6 months, Kurraba Point apartment sales had an $1.06M median across 8 sales.

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Demographic info

Median age

43 years

Renters

50%

Top 3 occupations

Professionals40%
Managers30%
Clerical and Administrative Workers10%

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Living in Kurraba Point NSW 2089: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Kurraba Point NSW 2089 a good suburb for families?

Kurraba Point NSW 2089 is a solid rather than standout option for families. The suburb scores well on safety at 4 out of 5, which matters for buyers thinking about day-to-day comfort, and the share of children is meaningful without being especially high, with around 5.0% aged 0 to 4 and 8.2% aged 5 to 14. That suggests families are certainly part of the local mix, but Kurraba Point is not dominated by large family households. The bigger qualification is housing type. Separate houses account for only 9% of homes, while apartments make up 52%, and the average household size is a modest 2.1 people. For buyers wanting a family-friendly suburb with more space, backyard living and a stronger detached-house market, Kurraba Point can feel limited. Still, for families prioritising safety, harbour lifestyle and Lower North Shore positioning over land size, it remains a credible choice.

What is it like to live in Kurraba Point NSW 2089?

Living in Kurraba Point NSW 2089 feels calm, established and distinctly harbour-side rather than busy or highly urban. Its character is best described as harbour residential, and that lines up with the waterfront setting and a decent tree canopy of 30.96%, which gives the suburb a softer feel than many dense inner-city locations. In practical terms, Kurraba Point lifestyle is likely to appeal to buyers who value scenery, a quieter atmosphere and a prestigious Lower North Shore address. The trade-off is convenience on foot. Walkability sits at 3 out of 5, which is reasonable, but retail is only 1 out of 5, so this is not a walk-everywhere suburb for daily shopping or café variety. Culture is a moderate 3 out of 5, adding some balance without making it a major activity hub. Kurraba Point suits buyers wanting a more residential harbour setting, not those chasing constant buzz.

Is Kurraba Point NSW 2089 well connected for commuting?

Kurraba Point NSW 2089 is reasonably well connected for commuting, especially for buyers comfortable using a mix of ferry, bus and nearby rail rather than expecting a station inside the suburb itself. Public transport access is broader than it first appears: buses are plentiful, ferry access is available, and both train and metro are nearby rather than directly in Kurraba Point. The listed rail access points to the T1 line nearby, and metro access is also nearby via M1, which strengthens the commute picture for Lower North Shore buyers. Average travel time to the Sydney CBD is around 25 minutes by public transport and about 15 minutes by car, which is competitive. The trade-off is that this is a layered commute rather than a simple doorstep train suburb. Buyers who want immediate station access may see that as a drawback, while those happy with ferry or short connections may find Kurraba Point very workable.

Who does Kurraba Point NSW 2089 suit best?

Kurraba Point NSW 2089 suits professionals, higher-income buyers and downsizers best, particularly those who want a prestige harbour location without needing a large block of land. The resident profile is quite clear: 72.22% of locals are managers and professionals, with professionals alone making up 44.32% and managers 27.9%. Median weekly personal income of $1,572 and family income of $3,666 also point to a well-established, comparatively affluent buyer pool. Housing mix matters here too. With only 9% separate houses and 52% apartments, Kurraba Point is better suited to buyers comfortable with apartment or smaller-scale living than to those specifically searching for classic family-house stock. The median age of 40 suggests a mature, settled community rather than a very youthful one. For buyers wanting more land, more family-sized detached housing or a more owner-occupier-dominant feel, Kurraba Point may feel restrictive, especially with renters at 51.4%.

What are the pros and cons of living in Kurraba Point NSW 2089?

The main trade-off in Kurraba Point NSW 2089 is that you get harbour lifestyle and strong commuter access, but you give up some everyday convenience and housing choice. On the plus side, Kurraba Point scores well for safety at 4 out of 5, has a genuine waterfront setting, offers ferry access, many bus services, and nearby train and metro links, with a CBD commute of around 25 minutes by public transport or 15 minutes by car. That is a strong combination for buyers who want a scenic Lower North Shore base without feeling cut off. The compromise is in the local amenity mix. Retail is only 1 out of 5 and walkability is moderate at 3 out of 5, so daily errands may take more planning than in a more village-centred suburb. Housing is also apartment-heavy. For buyers prioritising outlook, prestige and transport, Kurraba Point can work very well; for buyers chasing land and local buzz, less so.

What are property prices like in Kurraba Point NSW 2089?

Property prices in Kurraba Point NSW 2089 look expensive, especially for apartments, which are the main recent sales category available. Over the last six months, there were 7 recorded apartment sales in Kurraba Point, with a median sale price of $1.65 million, an average of about $2.04 million, and a wide range from $600,000 to $5.25 million. That spread tells buyers the suburb serves several entry points within the apartment market, but it also signals that premium stock can become very expensive very quickly. In practical terms, buying property in Kurraba Point usually means paying for harbour positioning, Lower North Shore prestige and strong access to the CBD, rather than chasing value on a dollars-per-square-metre basis. The trade-off is straightforward: buyers may secure an excellent lifestyle and location, but many will need to compromise on size, housing type or budget flexibility compared with less tightly held suburbs further from the harbour.