Mortdale NSW 2223 property reports

Mortdale NSW 2223

Suburb

Suburb summary

Mortdale, NSW 2223 is a St George suburb and popular choice for buyers seeking family-friendly living, Sydney real estate value, and strong transport. It has a population of 10,419, median age 37, average household size 2.6, and 34.85% renters. Housing is mixed, with 43% separate houses and 41% apartments. Mortdale train station is on the T4 line, with many bus services and average CBD commute times of 35 minutes by public transport and 30 minutes by car. In the past 6 months, median sold prices reached $1.85M for houses and $800,000 for apartments, with primary and secondary school ratings both at 5/5.

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

$1.8M

Derived from sales

House sales

61

In past 12 months

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Pocket Price Map

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Apartment projects

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PROJECTS MAP

Apartment projects map preview

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Demographic info

Median age

38 years

Renters

40%

Top 3 occupations

Professionals30%
Clerical and Administrative Workers20%
Managers10%

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Living in Mortdale NSW 2223: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Mortdale NSW 2223 a good suburb for families?

Mortdale NSW 2223 is a solid rather than standout suburb for families. The family case is helped by strong school ratings, with both primary and secondary education at 10 out of 5 in the supplied data, plus a safety rating of 4 out of 5, which is a good base for buyers focused on schools and everyday comfort. Children are well represented too, with about 6.8% of residents aged 0 to 4 and 10.7% aged 5 to 14, and the average household size of 2.6 suggests many established small families and couples. Mortdale also has a meaningful house presence, with separate houses making up 43% of homes, which matters for buyers wanting more outdoor space. The trade-off is that Mortdale is not purely a detached-house family suburb. Apartments account for 41% of housing, so parts of the suburb feel denser and more compact than some larger-house pockets further south. For buyers wanting schools, a reasonable sense of safety, and a practical St George location, Mortdale is a good suburb for families, but not the best fit if your priority is maximum space and a quieter low-density setting.

What is it like to live in Mortdale NSW 2223?

Living in Mortdale NSW 2223 feels practical, established, and suburban with a convenient everyday rhythm. The suburb sits in the St George region and reads as a suburban residential centre, so the lifestyle is more about getting daily life done efficiently than chasing a prestige or resort atmosphere. Walkability is a strong 4 out of 5, retail sits at 3 out of 5, and culture is 3 out of 5, which suggests a suburb where errands, local cafés, and basic shopping are reasonably accessible without everything feeling intensely urban. Safety at 4 out of 5 also adds to the appeal for buyers who want a comfortable, settled environment. The compromise is that Mortdale is more built-up than leafy. Its environmental character is urban and built-up, canopy cover is 20.74%, and there is no beach access, so buyers should not expect a green, coastal, or highly scenic lifestyle. Mortdale suits people who value a grounded, functional suburb with decent convenience, while those wanting a stronger village feel, more greenery, or a more lifestyle-led setting may find it a bit plain.

Is Mortdale NSW 2223 well connected for commuting?

Mortdale NSW 2223 is well connected for commuting, especially for buyers who rely on trains. The suburb has its own train access on the T4 line, many bus services, and an average public transport commute to the Sydney CBD of about 35 minutes. Driving time is also around 30 minutes on average, which gives Mortdale a fairly balanced transport profile for the St George area. For many owner-occupiers, that combination makes Mortdale a good commuter suburb because it offers a genuine public transport option rather than forcing daily car dependence. The trade-off is that the transport mix is not as broad as in some larger inner-city hubs. Mortdale has no metro, no light rail, and no ferry, so its strength comes mainly from rail and bus rather than multiple transport modes. That still works well for many buyers, especially those commuting along the T4 corridor, but people who want several fallback options or a shorter CBD run may see it as convenient rather than exceptional.

Who does Mortdale NSW 2223 suit best?

Mortdale NSW 2223 suits best-buyers who want a practical Sydney suburb with a mix of family housing, apartments, and commuter convenience. The housing mix is balanced rather than one-dimensional, with 43% separate houses and 41% apartments, so Mortdale can work for both family buyers and downsizers or couples who are open to lower-maintenance living. The resident profile also points to a stable, working professional area: professionals are the top occupation group at 25.6%, managers also feature strongly, and 37.29% of residents are managers or professionals overall. With median weekly family income at $2,016 and a median age of 37, Mortdale looks like a suburb chosen by established households rather than a purely youthful renter market. That said, it may suit some buyers better than others. With renters making up 34.85% of residents, Mortdale has a more mixed and active feel than a tightly held prestige enclave. Buyers wanting a very high-end suburb, very large land, or a strongly lifestyle-driven address may look elsewhere, while buyers wanting balance, practicality, and reasonable access will often find Mortdale a good fit.

What are the pros and cons of living in Mortdale NSW 2223?

The main trade-off in Mortdale NSW 2223 is that you get strong everyday convenience and commuter access, but not a highly scenic or prestige-style lifestyle. Mortdale does a lot well for buyers who value daily function. It has train access on the T4 line, many bus services, a 35-minute public transport CBD commute, walkability of 4 out of 5, and safety of 4 out of 5. That combination makes day-to-day living fairly easy, especially for households juggling work, school, and errands. The suburb also has a balanced housing mix, so it can appeal to both family buyers and those seeking something easier to manage than a large standalone house. What buyers give up is a bit of atmosphere and space. Mortdale is urban and built-up, canopy cover is only 20.74%, and the housing stock is not dominated by detached homes. For some people, that means less greenery, less exclusivity, and less of a quiet prestige feel. Buyers who care most about convenience may see that as a fair exchange, while buyers chasing more land, a leafier streetscape, or a stronger lifestyle identity may feel the compromise more.

What are property prices like in Mortdale NSW 2223?

Property prices in Mortdale NSW 2223 are mid-range to expensive by Sydney buyer expectations, depending on whether you are looking at apartments or houses. Recent sales show a clear split in the local market. Apartments had a median price of about $805,750 across 32 sales, while houses had a median price of about $1.85 million across 16 sales. In practical terms, that makes Mortdale more accessible for buyers entering through the unit market, while detached houses already require a much more established budget. The gap between the two also tells buyers that Mortdale offers different entry points depending on how much space and land they want. The trade-off is straightforward. Buying a house in Mortdale means paying a meaningful premium for land and family-style living in a train-connected St George suburb. Apartments offer a more attainable path into Mortdale, but usually with less space and less long-term flexibility than a house. For buyers weighing property prices in Mortdale, the suburb can represent solid value for its location and transport, but budget pressure becomes much more real once you move into the house market.