Macquarie Park NSW 2113 property reports

Macquarie Park NSW 2113

Suburb

Suburb summary

Macquarie Park, NSW 2113 is a major Lower North Shore and Ryde Corridor hub known for apartments, Macquarie University, tech business parks and strong transport links. The suburb spans 6.7633 sq km, has 8,144 residents, median age 29, and 73% apartments versus 25% old units. It is metro-connected on the M1 line, has many bus services, and average CBD commute times of 35 minutes by public transport and 25 minutes by car. Median apartment sale price over the past 6 months was $820,000 from 87 sales. Popular search terms include Macquarie Park property market, Macquarie Park apartments, Macquarie Park lifestyle, and Macquarie Park transport.

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

$873k

Derived from sales

House sales

1

In past 12 months

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Pocket Price Map

Pocket price distribution map preview

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Apartment projects

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PROJECTS MAP

Apartment projects map preview

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Demographic info

Median age

31 years

Renters

70%

Top 3 occupations

Professionals40%
Managers10%
Technicians and Trades Workers10%

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Living in Macquarie Park NSW 2113: 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 Park NSW 2113 a good suburb for families?

Macquarie Park NSW 2113 is a mixed rather than standout option for families. For buyers asking whether Macquarie Park is a good suburb for families, the answer depends on whether you value convenience more than a traditional family-house setting. The suburb scores 3 out of 5 for safety, which is workable but not especially strong, and the local housing mix is heavily apartment-based, with about 73% apartments and virtually no separate-house share. Average household size is a compact 2.1 people, and the proportions of young children are modest at roughly 5.4% aged 0 to 4 and 4.2% aged 5 to 14, which suggests Macquarie Park is not primarily shaped around larger family households. That said, for smaller families, professional couples with one child, or buyers prioritising access to jobs, metro transport and everyday convenience, Macquarie Park can still make sense. The trade-off is that families wanting more backyard space, a quieter streetscape or a classic family-friendly suburb feel may find it less suitable.

What is it like to live in Macquarie Park NSW 2113?

Living in Macquarie Park NSW 2113 feels urban, convenient and strongly shaped by work, study and everyday practicality. Macquarie Park sits in the Lower North Shore and Ryde corridor and has the feel of an education, tech and dining precinct rather than a quiet residential village. That translates into a lifestyle with solid convenience: walkability, retail and culture all rate 4 out of 5, so buyers can expect a suburb where daily errands, dining and activity are relatively easy to access. Tree canopy cover is 34.24%, which gives some greenery, but the area is still best understood as built-up rather than leafy in the classic upper north shore sense. Safety at 3 out of 5 is reasonable rather than exceptional. For many buyers, the appeal of Macquarie Park is that it is easy to live in without being sleepy. The trade-off is that if you want a calm, prestige-led or low-density suburb experience, Macquarie Park may feel too commercial and apartment-oriented.

Is Macquarie Park NSW 2113 well connected for commuting?

Macquarie Park NSW 2113 is well connected for commuting, especially for buyers who rely on metro and buses. The suburb does not have heavy rail, but it does have current metro access on the M1 line, including Macquarie Park and Macquarie University stations, and bus services are rated as many. For Sydney CBD trips, the average public transport commute is about 30 minutes, while driving averages around 25 minutes, which makes Macquarie Park a fairly competitive option for commuters compared with many middle-ring suburbs. This is one of the suburb’s clearest strengths and a major reason it appeals to professionals and students. In practical terms, Macquarie Park offers genuine public transport convenience rather than just bus-only access. The trade-off is that buyers wanting multiple transport modes such as train, ferry or light rail do not get that same mix here. Commuting is strong, but the suburb’s transport identity is more metro-and-bus based than broadly multimodal.

Who does Macquarie Park NSW 2113 suit best?

Macquarie Park NSW 2113 suits professionals, investors, first-home buyers targeting apartments, and households that prioritise convenience over land size. The suburb has a very strong professional profile, with managers and professionals making up about 53.4% of residents, and the top occupation group alone is professionals at roughly 42%. The median personal income of $658 per week is modest, but the median family income of $1,996 per week and median age of 29 point to a younger, working and study-oriented population. Housing choice also shapes the buyer fit: around 73% of homes are apartments, virtually 0% are separate houses, and about 66.9% of properties are rented, which gives Macquarie Park a more active, less tightly held feel than classic family-house suburbs. For buyers asking who Macquarie Park suits, the answer is people comfortable with density and a more urban rhythm. It is likely to suit large-family house buyers less well, especially those wanting more backyard space, quieter streets and a stronger detached-home neighbourhood feel.

What are the pros and cons of living in Macquarie Park NSW 2113?

The main trade-off in Macquarie Park NSW 2113 is simple: you get strong convenience and transport, but you give up some space, calm and traditional suburb feel. On the plus side, Macquarie Park performs well where many buyers need it to. Walkability, retail and culture are all 4 out of 5, metro access is already in place, bus coverage is strong, and CBD travel times are quite manageable at around 30 minutes by public transport and 25 minutes by car. That makes day-to-day living practical, especially for professionals and buyers who want less friction in their routine. The other side of that equation is the housing and environment profile. Macquarie Park is urban and built-up, safety is a mid-range 3 out of 5, and the suburb is dominated by apartments rather than houses. For some buyers, that is a fair exchange for location and connectivity. For others, especially larger families or buyers wanting a quieter, more established residential atmosphere, those disadvantages will matter more.

What are property prices like in Macquarie Park NSW 2113?

Property prices in Macquarie Park NSW 2113 are mid-range to expensive for apartments, with the suburb functioning mainly as an apartment market rather than a house market. In the past six months, apartment sales dominated local activity, with 74 recorded sales and a median price of $833,000. The middle of the market looks relatively broad, with the 25th percentile at $640,000 and the 75th percentile at $980,000, which suggests Macquarie Park offers different apartment entry points depending on size, age and quality. There was only one recorded house sale, at $1,090,000, so that number is not enough to treat as a reliable guide to house prices in Macquarie Park. For buyers considering buying property in Macquarie Park, the practical takeaway is that this is primarily a unit-buying suburb. The trade-off is clear: you are often paying for metro access, employment proximity and convenience rather than land, so value is stronger for apartment-focused buyers than for those specifically chasing a detached family house.