Miller NSW 2168 property reports

Miller NSW 2168

Suburb

Suburb summary

Miller NSW 2168 is a South West Sydney suburb in the South West & Macarthur region, with a population of 3,237 across 1.2705 sq km. Popular searches include Miller NSW property, Miller suburb profile, and Miller house prices. Housing is house-led, with 722 separate houses and 301 apartments. In the past 6 months, 10 houses sold, with a median price of $910,000. Miller has a median age of 36, average household size of 2.7, and median weekly family income of $936. Public transport to the Sydney CBD averages 90 minutes, driving about 40 minutes.

Pocket Price Distribution

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Suburb median

$990k

Derived from sales

House sales

23

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

35 years

Renters

60%

Top 3 occupations

Technicians and Trades Workers20%
Machinery Operators and Drivers20%
Managers10%

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Living in Miller NSW 2168: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Miller NSW 2168 a good suburb for families?

Miller NSW 2168 is a mixed rather than standout option for families. The suburb does show some family markers, with children making up a meaningful share of residents, around 6.8% aged 0 to 4 and 14.8% aged 5 to 14, and the average household size is 2.7 people, which points to a practical family presence. Housing also leans toward separate houses, at 54%, which gives many buyers a better chance of finding backyard-style living than in higher-density suburbs. On the schooling side, the education ratings are strong at 6 out of 5 for both primary and secondary in the supplied data, which suggests buyers looking for a school-focused move will want to take Miller seriously. The trade-off is that safety is rated 2 out of 5, and apartments still make up 22% of homes, so Miller does not read as one of Sydney’s most polished or peaceful family-friendly suburbs. It may suit value-driven families who prioritise house-based living and schooling access over prestige or a quieter village feel.

What is it like to live in Miller NSW 2168?

Living in Miller NSW 2168 feels practical, suburban, and fairly built-up rather than polished or lifestyle-led. It sits in Sydney’s South West & Macarthur region and has an industrial-residential character, so the day-to-day experience is more functional than scenic. The environment is described as urban and built-up, with canopy cover just under 21%, which means Miller is not especially leafy by Sydney standards. Walkability, retail, culture, and safety are each rated 2 out of 5, pointing to a suburb where daily life is likely to be serviceable rather than vibrant or highly walk-everywhere. For buyers, that means Miller can work well if you want a straightforward suburb with detached housing and a more grounded local feel. The trade-off is that the suburb lifestyle is less about café culture, beach access, or a strong village atmosphere and more about practicality. Buyers wanting a greener, more atmospheric, or more convenient neighbourhood may find the Miller lifestyle a bit plain, while budget-conscious households may see that simplicity as part of the appeal.

Is Miller NSW 2168 well connected for commuting?

Miller NSW 2168 is reasonably well connected, but the transport picture is mixed. The suburb does not have its own train station, although rail is nearby through Liverpool on the T2, T3 and T5 lines, and bus service is rated as many, which helps with local movement and connections. There is no metro, no light rail, and no ferry access, so public transport options are useful rather than extensive. The average commute to the Sydney CBD is about 90 minutes by public transport, while driving is much faster at around 40 minutes in typical conditions. For commuters, that means Miller can work if you are comfortable using buses and nearby rail rather than expecting direct station access in the suburb itself. The main trade-off is time and convenience. Buyers who travel to the CBD daily may find the public transport commute long, while those working locally, driving, or commuting outside peak city patterns may find Miller more manageable than the headline numbers suggest.

Who does Miller NSW 2168 suit best?

Miller NSW 2168 suits best buyers looking for a practical house-focused suburb with a working-family profile rather than a prestige or highly urban one. Separate houses make up 54% of homes, compared with 22% apartments, so the suburb leans more toward traditional family housing than dense apartment living. The rental share is almost 60%, which gives Miller a more mixed and active turnover profile than tightly held owner-dominated suburbs. Resident occupations are led by labourers, machinery operators and drivers, and trades workers, while managers and professionals account for about 12.5%, so the suburb reads as grounded, value-conscious, and more blue-collar in character. Median weekly personal and family incomes are also on the lower side. That makes Miller a sensible fit for buyers chasing space and relative affordability, especially families upgrading from apartments or first-home buyers targeting a house. It may suit high-income professional buyers less well if they want a more established prestige feel, stronger walkability, or a more refined lifestyle setting.

What are the pros and cons of living in Miller NSW 2168?

The main trade-off in Miller NSW 2168 is that buyers can access more practical house-based living, but they give up some lifestyle polish and commuter convenience. On the plus side, Miller has a solid detached-house presence, many bus services, nearby train access through Liverpool, and a driving commute to the CBD that is more manageable than the public transport time suggests. For buyers focused on function, budget discipline, and family-sized housing, those are meaningful advantages. The suburb also has a straightforward suburban feel that may appeal to households who care more about usable space than image. The compromise is that Miller scores 2 out of 5 for safety, walkability, retail, and culture, and its built-up industrial-residential character means it is not one of the more charming or destination-style parts of Sydney. That matters most for buyers who want a lively local scene, a leafy streetscape, or an easy public transport routine. Even so, Miller can still be a good fit for the right buyer, especially if house value matters more than atmosphere.

What are property prices like in Miller NSW 2168?

Property prices in Miller NSW 2168 look relatively affordable by Sydney house-buying standards. In the recent six-month sales sample, houses had a median price of $910,000 across 9 sales, with the middle market sitting roughly between $830,000 at the 25th percentile and $1,000,000 at the 75th percentile. The average sale price was about $933,278, and the top end of the recent sample reached $1,170,000. For Sydney buyers, that positions Miller as a suburb where a freestanding house may still be within reach at a level that is difficult to find in many middle-ring locations. In practical terms, buying property in Miller may offer a lower entry point for house buyers who have been priced out elsewhere. The trade-off is that you are not paying for beachside lifestyle, premium amenity, or top-tier connectivity. Instead, the value proposition is more about getting land and house stock at a more accessible price point, with some compromise on convenience and overall suburb feel.