
Llandilo NSW 2747
Suburb summary
Llandilo, NSW 2747 is a rural residential suburb in Sydney’s Outer West, covering 18.6349 sq km with a population of 1,637 and low density of 87.85 people per sq km. Popular searches like Llandilo NSW property market, Llandilo house prices, and living in Llandilo fit its profile: 100% separate houses, average household size 3.5, median age 36, and 63.66% canopy cover. Median weekly personal income is $675 and family income is $1,838. Recent house sales were limited at 2 in 6 months, with a median price of $3.05M. Public transport commute to Sydney CBD averages 90 minutes; driving averages 55 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
$2.5M
Derived from sales
House sales
9
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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11 popular houses in Llandilo NSW 2747
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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Demographic info
Median age
38 years
Renters
30%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Llandilo NSW 2747: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is LLANDILO NSW 2747 a good suburb for families?
LLANDILO NSW 2747 is a solid suburb for families, especially for buyers who want space, a house-focused setting and strong school appeal. The local school ratings are very strong at 8 out of 10 for both primary and secondary, and the suburb’s average household size of 3.5 suggests family households are a meaningful part of the area. LLANDILO is also almost entirely made up of separate houses, which usually suits buyers looking for larger homes, more outdoor space and better day-to-day practicality for kids, storage and multigenerational living. The share of children is healthy too, with about 6.2% aged 0 to 4 and 15.6% aged 5 to 14, which supports the sense that families do choose the area. The trade-off is that safety sits at 2 out of 5 and convenience is limited, so while LLANDILO can work well for families wanting room to grow, it may feel less suitable for buyers prioritising a more polished or walkable family-friendly suburb.
What is it like to live in LLANDILO NSW 2747?
Living in LLANDILO NSW 2747 feels quiet, spacious and semi-rural in character rather than busy or urban. The suburb character is best described as rural residential, and that translates into a lifestyle where buyers are typically choosing larger house blocks, more breathing room and a slower pace over convenience and buzz. Tree canopy cover is high at 63.66%, which helps give LLANDILO a greener feel than many built-up parts of Sydney, even though the broader environment is still classified as urban and built-up rather than bushland or waterfront. In practical terms, living in LLANDILO is more about privacy, home space and a settled local rhythm than cafes, shops or walk-everywhere convenience, with walkability and retail both at 1 out of 5. That is the main trade-off: LLANDILO can be appealing if you value room and calm, but buyers wanting a lively, highly connected lifestyle may find it too quiet and car-dependent.
Is LLANDILO NSW 2747 well connected for commuting?
LLANDILO NSW 2747 is less convenient for commuting than many Sydney suburbs, although it is not completely disconnected. Train access is nearby rather than in the suburb itself, with Penrith’s T1 line being the relevant rail option, and bus service is limited rather than extensive. The average commute to the Sydney CBD is about 90 minutes by public transport and around 55 minutes by car, so LLANDILO is better described as workable for some commuters than genuinely strong for daily CBD travel. There is no metro, light rail or ferry access shaping the current transport picture, which means most buyers will rely heavily on driving and then connecting into the broader network. For Outer West buyers who mainly move around Western Sydney or who only commute into the city occasionally, LLANDILO can still make sense. The trade-off is clear though: you are buying space and a different pace of life, not top-tier public transport convenience.
Who does LLANDILO NSW 2747 suit best?
LLANDILO NSW 2747 suits best buyers who want a full house, more land, and a quieter Outer West lifestyle rather than apartment living or inner-city convenience. The suburb is 100% separate houses with effectively no apartment market, so the housing mix strongly favours families, upsizers and multigenerational households wanting practical space. With a median age of 36 and average household size of 3.5, LLANDILO appears to attract established households more than very transient renters, and the rental share of about 22.4% suggests it is not overwhelmingly tenant-driven. Occupationally, the area is fairly mixed, with clerical and administrative workers, trades and managers all well represented, which often points to owner-occupiers seeking function and room over prestige. In buyer terms, LLANDILO may suit families with cars, home-based routines or lifestyle priorities tied to house space. It is likely to suit downsizers wanting walkability or buyers seeking a strong apartment market much less well.
What are the pros and cons of living in LLANDILO NSW 2747?
The main trade-off in LLANDILO NSW 2747 is simple: you gain space, greenery and a house-based lifestyle, but you give up convenience and some everyday amenity. On the plus side, LLANDILO has a distinctly spacious rural-residential feel, high canopy cover at 63.66%, a 100% separate-house profile and strong school ratings, all of which can appeal to buyers wanting room for family life, hobbies or a more relaxed home environment. It is the kind of suburb where land and house living shape the experience more than density or urban energy. The compromise is that walkability and retail are both only 1 out of 5, bus services are limited, and the CBD commute is long, especially by public transport. Safety is also only 2 out of 5, so buyers should weigh that carefully. For the right buyer, especially one prioritising house space over convenience, LLANDILO can still be a very practical fit.
What are property prices like in LLANDILO NSW 2747?
Property prices in LLANDILO NSW 2747 look expensive by most buyer expectations, although the suburb’s house-only market means the comparison is really about land and house value rather than entry-level Sydney pricing. In the most recent six months of sales captured here, there were only two house sales, with a median price of about $3.05 million and an average of about $3.2 million. That points to a high entry point for buyers considering LLANDILO, especially given this is not a dense suburb with a broad apartment market offering cheaper alternatives. In practical terms, buying property in LLANDILO usually means committing to a large-house, land-led purchase rather than testing the market at a lower budget. The trade-off is that buyers may be paying for scale, privacy and a very house-focused environment, but they are not getting the same level of transport convenience, walkability or retail amenity that some premium-priced Sydney suburbs offer.
