
Longueville NSW 2066
Suburb summary
Longueville NSW 2066 is a prestigious Lower North Shore Sydney suburb known for harbourfront living, waterfront homes, and family appeal. Covering 0.9933 sq km, Longueville has a population of 2,060, median age 45, average household size 3.2, and strong affluence with median weekly family income of $4,380. Housing is dominated by separate houses (645 dwellings, 97%), with apartments making up 1%. The suburb has primary and secondary school ratings of 5/5, safety 4/5, tree canopy cover of 37.69%, and many bus services. In the past 6 months, 5 houses sold, with a median house price of $4.45M.
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
$5.2M
Derived from sales
House sales
16
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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68 popular houses in Longueville NSW 2066
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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Demographic info
Median age
46 years
Renters
10%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Longueville NSW 2066: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Longueville NSW 2066 a good suburb for families?
Longueville NSW 2066 is a strong suburb for families, especially for buyers prioritising quality schooling, larger homes and a quieter residential setting. The school profile is a major draw, with both primary and secondary education rated 10 out of 10, and the safety rating sits at 4 out of 5, which is reassuring for family buyers comparing Lower North Shore suburbs. Longueville also has a very high separate-house share at 97%, almost no apartment stock, and an average household size of 3.2, all of which points to a suburb built around family-style living rather than dense turnover. Children are clearly part of the local mix too, with about 16.2% of residents aged 5 to 14. The main trade-off is that Longueville is not a highly convenient, walk-everywhere suburb, so families often pay a premium for space, schooling and harbour-side character rather than everyday retail access or fast transport options.
What is it like to live in Longueville NSW 2066?
Living in Longueville NSW 2066 feels calm, established and distinctly harbour-side rather than busy or urban. It sits in the Lower North Shore & Ryde Corridor and has a harbour residential character, which comes through in its waterfront setting and relatively strong tree canopy cover of 37.69%. That gives Longueville a greener, more private feel than many built-up Sydney suburbs, even though it is not a beachside location. Day to day, the lifestyle is more about quiet streets, quality homes and a residential atmosphere than cafés, nightlife or major shopping strips. Walkability is 3 out of 5, culture is 3 out of 5 and retail is 2 out of 5, so the suburb is comfortable rather than lively. For buyers asking what it is like to live in Longueville, the short answer is peaceful and prestigious, but not especially action-packed. That trade-off suits buyers who value home environment over constant local convenience.
Is Longueville NSW 2066 well connected for commuting?
Longueville NSW 2066 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s most transport-rich suburbs. There is no train, metro, light rail or ferry service directly in the suburb, although bus coverage is rated as many, which helps fill the gap for everyday public transport. The average commute to the Sydney CBD is about 40 minutes by public transport and around 25 minutes by car, so Longueville is still workable for city professionals, especially those who drive or are comfortable relying on buses. In practical terms, this means the suburb is better connected than an outer suburban location, but less flexible than a North Shore suburb with direct rail access. That is the key trade-off buyers should understand. If you want a quieter harbour-side residential pocket and can accept a bus-based public transport pattern, Longueville can work well. If direct train access matters, it may feel less convenient.
Who does Longueville NSW 2066 suit best?
Longueville NSW 2066 suits affluent family buyers and established professionals best, particularly those looking for a house-dominated Lower North Shore suburb with a more private residential feel. The housing mix is a big clue: 97% of dwellings are separate houses and only 1% are apartments, so Longueville strongly favours buyers wanting land, home size and a traditional family layout. The local resident profile also points in that direction, with professionals making up 42.91% of occupations, managers 22.99%, and managers and professionals together accounting for 65.91% of residents. Weekly family income is also very high at $4,380, which signals a premium owner-occupier market. Longueville may suit buyers with older children or multigenerational households too, given the larger-home format and median age of 45. It is likely to suit first-home buyers, apartment buyers and highly budget-sensitive households less well, because the suburb’s character and price point lean toward established wealth and long-term living.
What are the pros and cons of living in Longueville NSW 2066?
The main trade-off in Longueville NSW 2066 is that buyers get space, strong schools and a high-quality harbour-side residential environment, but give up some convenience and transport variety. On the plus side, Longueville has a safety rating of 4 out of 5, excellent school ratings, a very high detached-house share, low rental presence at 7.6%, and solid tree cover, all of which support a settled, owner-occupied feel. It is the sort of suburb that appeals to buyers who care more about home life, privacy and long-term family suitability than being in the middle of a busy retail hub. On the other hand, retail is only 2 out of 5, walkability is 3 out of 5, and there is no train, metro, light rail or ferry within the suburb itself. So the disadvantages of living in Longueville are mostly about convenience, not quality. For the right buyer, that is a perfectly acceptable compromise.
What are property prices like in Longueville NSW 2066?
Property prices in Longueville NSW 2066 are premium by Sydney standards, especially for houses. In the last six months of recorded sales returned here, Longueville houses had a median sale price of about $4.45 million, with an average around $5.09 million across five sales. The lower end of those house sales was about $4.03 million, while the top end reached roughly $7.02 million, which confirms that buying property in Longueville sits firmly in the prestige bracket rather than the mainstream family market. For buyers, that pricing suggests entry is expensive even before moving toward the suburb’s better-positioned homes. The upside is access to a tightly held, house-dominated Lower North Shore suburb with strong schools and a waterfront setting. The trade-off is obvious: you are paying heavily for land, prestige and lifestyle, and that will place real budget pressure on many otherwise strong family buyers looking nearby.
