
Mosman NSW 2088
Suburb summary
Mosman, NSW 2088 is a prestigious Lower North Shore suburb in Sydney’s harbour-side market, known for an affluent village feel and strong family appeal. Covering 8.6503 sq km, Mosman has 28,475 residents, median age 42, median weekly personal income of $1,295, and median family income of $3,671. Housing includes 3,901 houses and 5,699 apartments. In the past 6 months, median sold prices reached $4.20M for houses and $1.15M for apartments, with 39 house sales and 94 apartment sales. Mosman also offers top-rated schools, ferry access, many buses, 34.87% canopy cover, and a typical CBD commute of 30 minutes by public 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
$5.8M
Derived from sales
House sales
150
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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538 popular houses in Mosman NSW 2088
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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752 popular apartments in Mosman NSW 2088
Demographic info
Median age
45 years
Renters
30%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Mosman NSW 2088: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Mosman NSW 2088 a good suburb for families?
Mosman NSW 2088 is a strong suburb for families, especially for buyers who value schooling, safety and a more established Lower North Shore setting. The school profile is a standout, with both primary and secondary education rated 10 out of 10, and safety also sits at a solid 4 out of 5, which supports Mosman’s reputation as a good suburb for families. The age mix is also family-relevant rather than purely downsizer-driven, with 5.4% of residents aged 0 to 4 and 12.7% aged 5 to 14, so there is a genuine base of households with children. Average household size is 2.4, which points to a balanced mix of couples, families and older residents. The trade-off is housing form and cost: Mosman has a meaningful apartment share at 41%, with separate houses at 28%, so larger family homes are not the dominant stock and buying into the suburb can come with real budget pressure.
What is it like to live in Mosman NSW 2088?
Living in Mosman NSW 2088 feels established, affluent and harbour-oriented, with a polished village atmosphere rather than a fast, high-rise urban one. The suburb character comes through clearly as an affluent harbour-side village, and that lines up with the environmental setting, which is tied to harbour and waterfront features. In day-to-day lifestyle terms, Mosman offers a strong balance: walkability, retail and culture all rate 4 out of 5, so buyers can expect a suburb that is practical as well as attractive, with good local amenity and a fairly engaging street life. Canopy cover of 34.87% also helps it feel greener than many denser Sydney locations. Safety is another plus at 4 out of 5. The main trade-off is that Mosman’s prestige and activity can make it feel less casual or budget-friendly than more relaxed suburbs, so it tends to suit buyers who want quality surroundings and convenience more than sheer value.
Is Mosman NSW 2088 well connected for commuting?
Mosman NSW 2088 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but the transport picture is mixed rather than all-in on rail. There is no train, metro or light rail station in Mosman itself, so it is not a suburb where rail commuters simply walk to a station each morning. That said, bus service is rated as many, ferry access is available, and the average trip to the Sydney CBD is about 30 minutes by public transport or 20 minutes by car, which is still competitive for a harbour-side suburb this close to the city. For many buyers, that makes Mosman good for commuters who are comfortable using buses, ferries or driving. The trade-off is predictability: compared with train-based suburbs, commuting from Mosman can involve more mode choice and a bit less simplicity, so buyers who want direct rail access may find other Lower North Shore areas more straightforward.
Who does Mosman NSW 2088 suit best?
Mosman NSW 2088 suits affluent professionals, established families and lifestyle-driven buyers who want a premium Lower North Shore address with strong amenity and harbour appeal. The resident profile is quite clear: 63.5% of workers are managers and professionals, with Professionals alone making up 39.5% and Managers another 24.0%. Median weekly personal income of $1,295 and family income of $3,671 also point to a high-income buyer and resident base. Housing is mixed, with 41% apartments and 28% separate houses, so Mosman suits both buyers seeking prestige apartments and those chasing a family home, provided budget allows. The median age of 42 suggests an established, mature community rather than a highly transient one. The limitation is obvious: Mosman may suit first-home buyers or budget-led upgraders less well, and buyers wanting a more entry-level, house-heavy suburb may find better value elsewhere.
What are the pros and cons of living in Mosman NSW 2088?
The main trade-off in Mosman NSW 2088 is that you get a premium harbour-side lifestyle and strong everyday amenity, but you give up some transport simplicity and affordability in return. On the plus side, Mosman performs well across the lifestyle basics buyers care about: safety is 4 out of 5, walkability is 4 out of 5, retail is 4 out of 5, culture is 4 out of 5, and the suburb has harbour-side environmental appeal with 34.87% canopy cover. Bus services are strong, ferry access helps, and CBD travel times remain workable. The housing mix also gives some choice between apartments and houses. On the other hand, there is no train, metro or light rail in the suburb, so commuting is less direct than in rail-based locations. Mosman may feel especially worthwhile for buyers prioritising lifestyle, schools and prestige, while buyers focused on value or easy train commuting may care more about those compromises.
What are property prices like in Mosman NSW 2088?
Property prices in Mosman NSW 2088 are premium by Sydney standards, especially for houses. Over the most recent six months of sales in the data, the median house price in Mosman was $4.4 million from 31 sales, while the median apartment price was $1.15 million from 80 sales. That pricing tells buyers two things quite quickly. First, buying a house in Mosman usually means entering a very high-budget segment where land, position and prestige all carry weight. Second, apartments provide a lower entry point into the suburb, although they still sit well above what many buyers would consider affordable in broader Sydney terms. The practical upside is access to a blue-chip harbour-side suburb with strong schooling and lifestyle appeal. The trade-off is budget pressure: in Mosman, buyers are often paying a substantial premium for location, amenity and status rather than chasing purely space-for-money value.
