Macquarie Links NSW 2565 property reports

Macquarie Links NSW 2565

Suburb

Suburb summary

Macquarie Links NSW 2565 is a residential suburb in South West Sydney’s Macarthur region, known for golf course living and a house-dominant streetscape. Separate houses make up 93% of homes, with apartments at 3%. The population is 1,360, median age is 35, average household size is 3.5, and median weekly family income is $2,639. Over the past 6 months, 5 houses sold, with a median house price of $1.08M and prices ranging from $905,000 to $1.51M. Macquarie Links offers many bus services, an 85-minute public transport CBD commute, 40-minute driving commute, and primary/secondary education ratings of 4 and 3.

Pocket Price Distribution

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Suburb median

$1.6M

Derived from sales

House sales

14

In past 12 months

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Pocket Price Map

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Apartment projects

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PROJECTS MAP

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Demographic info

Median age

39 years

Renters

10%

Top 3 occupations

Managers20%
Professionals20%
Clerical and Administrative Workers20%

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Living in Macquarie Links NSW 2565: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Macquarie Links NSW 2565 a good suburb for families?

Macquarie Links NSW 2565 is a solid suburb for families, especially for buyers who want a house-focused area with a settled residential feel. The family case is supported by a strong average household size of 3.5, a high share of children aged 5 to 14 at 15.8%, and an overwhelmingly house-based streetscape, with 93% separate houses and only 3% apartments. School performance also reads well, with primary schooling rated 4 out of 5 and secondary schooling 3 out of 5, while safety sits at a middle-ground 3 out of 5. That points to Macquarie Links being good for kids in a practical, everyday sense rather than in a prestige-school sense. The trade-off is that it is not the most walkable or lively suburb, so older children and parents wanting easy walk-to-shops convenience may find it less flexible. It is better suited to families who prioritise space, a suburban setting, and a house-led environment over buzz and convenience.

What is it like to live in Macquarie Links NSW 2565?

Living in Macquarie Links NSW 2565 feels established, quiet in a suburban sense, and centred on residential house living rather than walk-to-everything convenience. The suburb’s character comes through as golf course residential, which gives it a more enclosed and planned feel than many surrounding areas. Macquarie Links sits in the South West & Macarthur region and reads as a practical suburban lifestyle choice rather than a highly urban one. Tree canopy is 23.37%, which adds some greenery, but this is still fundamentally an urban built-up environment rather than a leafy North Shore-style setting. Daily life here is likely to feel more car-oriented, with walkability and retail both rating just 1 out of 5, while culture is 2 out of 5. That means the suburb can feel calm and contained for buyers who value privacy and housing stock, but less appealing for those who want café strips, strong street activity, or easy local errands on foot.

Is Macquarie Links NSW 2565 well connected for commuting?

Macquarie Links NSW 2565 is less convenient for commuting than many Sydney suburbs, although it is not completely cut off. The key transport picture is that the suburb has no train, no metro, and no light rail service within the suburb itself, so most commuters will depend heavily on buses or driving. Bus coverage is rated as many, which helps, but the broader commute still looks long by Sydney standards, with a typical public transport trip to the CBD around 85 minutes and driving around 40 minutes. For buyers who work locally, in the broader south-west, or have flexible schedules, that may be manageable. For daily CBD commuters, though, Macquarie Links is more of a trade-off suburb: you gain house-focused living and a more suburban environment, but you give up the ease of fast rail-based commuting. It is better for buyers who can tolerate car reliance than for those who want seamless public transport access.

Who does Macquarie Links NSW 2565 suit best?

Macquarie Links NSW 2565 suits family buyers, upgrader households, and owner-occupiers who want a house-dominant suburb with stable demographics and relatively low rental turnover. The housing mix is a big clue here: 93% of homes are separate houses and only 3% are apartments, which strongly favours buyers looking for more internal space, more privacy, and a suburban block rather than compact unit living. The rental share is low at about 10.1%, which suggests a more established owner-occupied feel. Resident profile also points to a relatively settled professional market, with 43.0% of residents working as managers or professionals, and top occupations including Professionals, Managers, and Clerical and Administrative workers. The median family income of $2,639 per week supports that picture. The trade-off is that Macquarie Links may suit downsizers, inner-city professionals, or buyers seeking apartment convenience less well. It makes more sense for buyers who value space and stability over walkability and entertainment.

What are the pros and cons of living in Macquarie Links NSW 2565?

The main trade-off in Macquarie Links NSW 2565 is simple: you get space, houses, and a settled suburban environment, but you give up convenience and transport variety. On the plus side, Macquarie Links is strongly house-based, with 93% separate houses, a low renter share of about 10.1%, and a family-sized average household of 3.5 people. That usually appeals to buyers who want a more residential atmosphere and less churn. Safety is moderate at 3 out of 5, and the golf course residential character gives the suburb a distinct, contained feel. On the downside, walkability and retail are both just 1 out of 5, culture is 2 out of 5, and there is no train, metro, light rail, or ferry service in the suburb. So what buyers should know about Macquarie Links is that it works best if you are comfortable driving and living a home-centred lifestyle. For the right buyer, that compromise can still be worthwhile.

What are property prices like in Macquarie Links NSW 2565?

Property prices in Macquarie Links NSW 2565 look mid-range to expensive in practical Sydney house-buying terms, especially for a suburb outside the inner ring but still offering a strong detached-house environment. In the recent six-month sales sample, houses had a median sale price of $1.08 million, with an average of about $1.17 million. The middle of the market sat roughly between $1.07 million and $1.288 million, while recorded sales ranged from $905,000 to $1.51 million. For buyers researching house prices in Macquarie Links, that suggests the suburb is not a bargain-basement entry point, but it can still offer better detached-home access than many more central Sydney locations. The trade-off is that you are paying for house stock and a contained residential setting rather than high walkability or top-tier transport. There was no apartment pricing returned in the recent sales data, which also fits the suburb’s overwhelmingly house-led market.