Lurnea NSW 2170 property reports

Lurnea NSW 2170

Suburb

Suburb summary

Lurnea, NSW 2170 is a residential suburb in South West Sydney’s South West & Macarthur region, popular in searches for Lurnea property, Lurnea NSW real estate, and living in Lurnea. It has 9,311 residents, a median age of 33, average household size of 3.1, and 96% separate houses. Over the past 6 months, median sold prices were $1.22M for houses and $800K for apartments. Lurnea has primary and secondary school ratings of 4/5, many bus services, and CBD commute averages of 75 minutes by public transport and 35 minutes by car.

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

$1.1M

Derived from sales

House sales

72

In past 12 months

Sign in to view:

Pocket Price Map

Pocket price distribution map preview

Explore higher and lower-priced pockets across the suburb.

Apartment projects

View apartment projects around the suburb.

Sign in to view:

PROJECTS MAP

Apartment projects map preview

Explore apartment projects across the suburb to understand supply and density.

Demographic info

Median age

32 years

Renters

40%

Top 3 occupations

Technicians and Trades Workers20%
Managers10%
Professionals10%

Try the knest.ai app

Full property insights and property decision tools are best experienced in the knest.ai app.

5.0 rating

15k users

Download appOpen in app

Living in Lurnea NSW 2170: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Lurnea NSW 2170 a good suburb for families?

Lurnea NSW 2170 is a mixed rather than standout option for families. The strongest family signal is its housing mix: around 96% of homes are separate houses and the average household size is 3.1 people, which usually suits buyers wanting more internal space, a backyard, and room for children or multi-generational living. There is also a solid share of children in the suburb, with about 8.2% aged 0 to 4 and 16.0% aged 5 to 14, so Lurnea is clearly not a child-free or purely transient market. School ratings are also a positive, with both primary and secondary education sitting at 8 out of 10. The trade-off is that safety is weak in the local rating, so buyers looking for a highly calm, highly secure family-friendly suburb should qualify that carefully. Lurnea can still work well for families who prioritise house-based living and practical space, but it is less convincing for buyers focused first on prestige, walk-everywhere convenience, or a more polished family environment.

What is it like to live in Lurnea NSW 2170?

Living in Lurnea NSW 2170 feels practical, suburban, and quite straightforward rather than polished or lifestyle-led. It sits in South West Sydney and reads as a residential suburb with an urban, built-up character, so the day-to-day experience is more about function than scenery or village charm. Walkability is moderate at 3 out of 5, which suggests some everyday errands may be manageable locally, but retail and cultural amenity are both only 2 out of 5, so Lurnea is not the kind of suburb where buyers should expect a strong café strip, broad dining scene, or a highly active local social atmosphere. Tree canopy is also quite low at 9.68%, which means Lurnea is not especially leafy by Sydney standards. That said, some buyers will like the suburb for exactly this reason: it feels down-to-earth, house-based, and less image-driven. The trade-off is that buyers chasing a greener, more character-rich, or more walkable lifestyle may find Lurnea a bit plain.

Is Lurnea NSW 2170 well connected for commuting?

Lurnea NSW 2170 is less convenient than Sydney’s better-connected commuter suburbs, although it is not completely disconnected. The suburb has many bus services, which helps for local movement and access to surrounding centres, but it does not have a train station, metro station, light rail, or ferry service in the suburb itself. That transport picture matters because the average public transport commute to the Sydney CBD is about 75 minutes, which is long for daily city-based commuting. Driving is much faster at around 35 minutes on average, so Lurnea tends to suit buyers who are more car-reliant or who work outside the CBD. For commuters, the key trade-off is clear: you may get more house-oriented value and space here, but you give up direct rail-based convenience. Lurnea can still suit practical buyers who mainly drive, use buses for local trips, or commute to employment hubs outside the inner city, but it is not a top pick for buyers wanting fast, simple public transport into central Sydney.

Who does Lurnea NSW 2170 suit best?

Lurnea NSW 2170 suits buyers who want a house-first suburb with a practical, everyday Sydney lifestyle rather than a prestige or apartment-driven market. With about 96% separate houses and only around 2% apartments, the suburb clearly leans toward buyers wanting land, family-sized homes, and more traditional suburban living. The median age is 33, which points to a relatively young adult profile, and the largest occupation groups are technicians and trades workers at 16.2%, clerical and administrative workers at 13.7%, and machinery operators and drivers at 13.4%. That profile suggests Lurnea is often a fit for working households who value utility, space, and manageable entry points over status. It may also appeal to families or multigenerational households, especially given the average household size of 3.1 people. The limitation is that it is less suited to buyers wanting a highly professionalised inner-ring feel, a strong apartment market, or a lifestyle centred on cafés, culture, and easy rail commuting. Lurnea is better for practical owner-occupiers than for buyers seeking a more polished urban experience.

What are the pros and cons of living in Lurnea NSW 2170?

The main trade-off in Lurnea NSW 2170 is that buyers can access a house-dominated, practical suburb, but they give up some lifestyle polish, transport convenience, and a stronger sense of amenity. The suburb’s biggest strength is its housing mix: around 96% separate houses is a major plus for buyers who want land, family space, or room for older relatives, hobbies, or outdoor living. Driving access is also more workable than public transport, with an average CBD drive of about 35 minutes. For some buyers, that makes Lurnea a sensible base rather than a lifestyle destination. The compromise is that safety is rated only 1 out of 5, retail and culture are both 2 out of 5, and there is no train, metro, or light rail in the suburb. Canopy cover is also low, so it does not feel especially leafy. Buyers who care most about convenience, atmosphere, or a more refined family setting will notice those trade-offs. Even so, Lurnea may still be a good fit for buyers who prioritise house space and practicality first.

What are property prices like in Lurnea NSW 2170?

Property prices in Lurnea NSW 2170 look mid-range to relatively affordable by Sydney house standards, especially for buyers focused on separate-house living. Over the recent six-month sales period, houses had a median price of about $1.21 million from 26 sales, with the middle market broadly sitting between about $1.075 million and $1.27 million. Apartments were cheaper, with a median of about $810,000 from 10 sales, although the suburb has a very small apartment share overall, so Lurnea is much more naturally a house market than a unit market. For buyers, that pricing suggests Lurnea can be an entry point into detached housing at a level that is often lower than many more established or better-connected Sydney family suburbs. The trade-off is that the lower buy-in compared with premium locations comes with compromises in transport, amenity, and overall lifestyle appeal. If your priority is space and a house in Sydney rather than prestige, walkability, or strong commuter links, Lurnea is worth considering.