
Meadowbank NSW 2114
Suburb summary
Meadowbank, NSW 2114 is a waterside suburb in the Lower North Shore and Ryde Corridor, popular for Meadowbank apartments, riverside living and Sydney CBD commuting. It has a population of 4,408, median age 32, many train and ferry connections, and average public transport commute of 35 minutes to the CBD. Housing is dominated by apartments, which make up 76% of dwellings, with 49 apartment sales in the past 6 months and a median sale price of $707,000. Meadowbank offers walkability, river access, strong primary school rating, and appeal for buyers seeking affordable waterfront apartments in Sydney NSW.
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
$680k
Derived from sales
House sales
1
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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1 popular houses in Meadowbank NSW 2114
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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255 popular apartments in Meadowbank NSW 2114
Demographic info
Median age
34 years
Renters
60%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Meadowbank NSW 2114: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Meadowbank NSW 2114 a good suburb for families?
Meadowbank NSW 2114 is a mixed rather than standout option for families. The strongest point is schooling: the suburb scores 5 out of 5 for primary education and 4 out of 5 for secondary, which is a solid signal for buyers focused on schools and day-to-day practicality. Safety sits at 3 out of 5, so this is not a suburb I would describe as especially quiet or secluded, but it is not weak either. The age mix shows some family presence, with 7.7% of residents aged 0 to 4 and 4.6% aged 5 to 14, although the average household size of 2.1 suggests many smaller households too. For buyers asking whether Meadowbank is a good suburb for families or good for kids, the answer depends on what kind of family life you want. It works better for families who value transport, riverside living and school access than those wanting a high-share detached house environment. With only 2% separate houses and 76% apartments, space and backyard options are the main trade-off.
What is it like to live in Meadowbank NSW 2114?
Living in Meadowbank NSW 2114 feels practical, waterside and fairly urban. The suburb sits in the Lower North Shore and Ryde corridor and has a clearly residential, river-adjacent character, so everyday life in Meadowbank tends to balance apartment convenience with access to open water outlooks and foreshore areas. Walkability is strong at 4 out of 5, which helps with local errands and station access, while retail and culture both sit at 3 out of 5, suggesting a decent but not major lifestyle hub. Tree canopy cover is 23.62%, so Meadowbank has some greenery, but it is not one of Sydney’s deeply leafy suburbs. For buyers researching what it is like to live in Meadowbank, the appeal is straightforward: a connected suburb with a waterside feel and practical daily convenience. The trade-off is that it reads more built-up and apartment-based than village-like or prestige-leafy. Buyers wanting a compact, commuter-friendly lifestyle may like that, while those chasing a quieter detached-house setting may feel it is a bit dense.
Is Meadowbank NSW 2114 well connected for commuting?
Meadowbank NSW 2114 is well connected for commuting, especially by train and ferry. The suburb has its own train access on the T1 and T9 lines, bus services are plentiful, and ferry access adds another transport option that many Sydney suburbs simply do not have. Average travel time to the Sydney CBD is about 35 minutes by public transport and around 30 minutes by car, which is quite workable for buyers who need regular city access. There is no current metro or light rail service, but Meadowbank is still one of the better-connected apartment suburbs in this part of Sydney because it offers more than one practical way to get around. For buyers asking if Meadowbank is good for commuters, I would say yes overall. The trade-off is that it is not one of those ultra-fast inner-city locations where everything hinges on a single short trip. Your commute is still meaningful, and depending on exactly where you work, you may rely on train timing, bus links or driving conditions.
Who does Meadowbank NSW 2114 suit best?
Meadowbank NSW 2114 suits professionals, couples, smaller households and buyers who want a practical Sydney base with strong transport links. The resident profile leans clearly toward professional households, with 51.3% of residents working in manager or professional roles, and Professionals alone make up 39.3% of occupations. The median age is 32, which points to a relatively young adult population, and the median weekly family income of $2,026 suggests a reasonably capable but not ultra-prestige buyer pool. Housing is dominated by apartments at 76%, while separate houses make up just 2%, and 60.5% of homes are rented, giving Meadowbank a more active, higher-turnover feel than tightly held family house suburbs. That makes Meadowbank a natural fit for buyers who value convenience over land size. It can still work for some families, especially those comfortable with apartment living near schools and transport. It suits large-house buyers, multi-generational households wanting outdoor space, or those specifically chasing a classic low-density family suburb less well.
What are the pros and cons of living in Meadowbank NSW 2114?
The main trade-off in Meadowbank NSW 2114 is that you get strong connectivity and waterside convenience, but you give up some space and suburban calm. On the plus side, Meadowbank performs well where many buyers feel daily pressure: train access, ferry access, many bus services, walkability at 4 out of 5, and workable CBD commute times. Its river-adjacent setting also adds lifestyle appeal that makes apartment living feel more open than in purely built-up inland pockets. For buyers who want a suburb that is easy to use rather than hard to manage, Meadowbank does a lot right. The compromise is in the housing mix and overall feel. With 76% apartments, only 2% separate houses and a rental share above 60%, Meadowbank is more urban, mixed and transient than a tightly held detached-house suburb. Safety is a moderate 3 out of 5 rather than especially high. Buyers who care most about backyard space, quiet streets and a traditional family-house atmosphere will notice that trade-off most. For the right buyer, though, the convenience is exactly the point.
What are property prices like in Meadowbank NSW 2114?
Property prices in Meadowbank NSW 2114 look mid-range by Sydney standards for apartments, rather than cheap or premium. In the most recent six months of sales captured here, Meadowbank recorded 48 apartment sales with a median price of $707,000, an average of about $736,156, and a middle range that broadly runs from $590,000 at the 25th percentile to $831,500 at the 75th percentile. Higher-end apartment sales reached $1.79 million, which shows there is still price variation depending on size, position and finish. For buyers researching house prices or property prices in Meadowbank, the main point is that this suburb currently reads as an apartment-led market. That creates a more accessible entry point than many detached-house suburbs in the same broader corridor, especially for first movers and downsizers who want transport and riverside convenience. The trade-off is straightforward: you are generally buying into density and a predominantly unit-based environment rather than paying for land, privacy or a classic family-house setting.
