
Mount Colah NSW 2079
Suburb summary
Mount Colah, NSW 2079 is a bushland suburb in Sydney’s Upper North Shore & Hornsby region, known for suburban residential living, T1 train access, and National Park adjacency. It has a population of 7,095, median age 39, average household size 3.1, and 39.18% canopy cover. Separate houses dominate housing stock at 99% (2,149 houses), with just 7 apartments. Over the past 6 months, median sold prices were $1.655M for houses and $660K for apartments. Mount Colah offers a 60-minute CBD public transport commute, 40-minute drive, safety rating 4, and primary school rating 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
$1.7M
Derived from sales
House sales
74
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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187 popular houses in Mount Colah NSW 2079
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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26 popular apartments in Mount Colah NSW 2079
Demographic info
Median age
40 years
Renters
20%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Mount Colah NSW 2079: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Mount Colah NSW 2079 a good suburb for families?
Mount Colah NSW 2079 is a strong suburb for families, especially for buyers who want a house-oriented area with a calmer Upper North Shore setting. The housing mix is a big part of that appeal: around 99% of homes are separate houses, apartments are effectively absent, and the average household size is 3.1, which points to a suburb that is set up for family living rather than high-density turnover. The child-age profile is also supportive, with about 6.0% of residents aged 0 to 4 and 15.1% aged 5 to 14, so there is a clear family presence. Safety rates a solid 4 out of 5, and the primary school rating is 10 out of 5 in the supplied data, which suggests local schooling is a real drawcard for family buyers. The trade-off is that Mount Colah is not the most urban or walk-everywhere family-friendly suburb. Retail and walkability are more modest, so daily convenience is stronger for buyers who are happy to drive and prioritise space, schools and a more residential feel over inner-city convenience.
What is it like to live in Mount Colah NSW 2079?
Living in Mount Colah NSW 2079 feels suburban, green and quietly practical rather than polished or high-energy. It sits in the Upper North Shore & Hornsby region and has a clearly residential character, with bushland and national park surroundings shaping the lifestyle more than cafés, nightlife or dense shopping strips. That natural setting is backed up by canopy cover of 39.18%, which gives Mount Colah a noticeably greener feel than many more built-up Sydney suburbs. Safety is a healthy 4 out of 5, which adds to the appeal for buyers looking for a settled environment. In everyday terms, Mount Colah lifestyle suits people who value space, privacy and access to nature more than walkable amenity. The suburb does not read as a highly urban convenience play, with walkability at 2 out of 5, retail at 3 out of 5 and culture at 2 out of 5. So the upside is peace and greenery, while the trade-off is that living in Mount Colah usually works best if you are comfortable relying on the car for more of your weekly routine.
Is Mount Colah NSW 2079 well connected for commuting?
Mount Colah NSW 2079 is reasonably well connected for commuting, particularly for buyers who want direct train access without paying for a more central North Shore location. The suburb has a train station on the T1 line, which is a genuine strength for commuters heading toward major employment areas. The average public transport commute to the Sydney CBD is about 60 minutes, while driving averages around 40 minutes, so Mount Colah is workable for city-based professionals but not especially close in. Bus services are available but limited, there is no metro, no light rail and no ferry, so the transport picture is functional rather than multi-layered. For many buyers, that means Mount Colah is good for commuters who are happy with a longer but straightforward journey. The main trade-off is flexibility: if you like having several transport modes at your doorstep, other suburbs will feel better connected. Mount Colah suits buyers who see rail access as the key box to tick and are comfortable balancing commute time against more space and a greener setting.
Who does Mount Colah NSW 2079 suit best?
Mount Colah NSW 2079 suits family buyers, professional households and upgraders who want a house-based suburb with a more spacious Upper North Shore feel. The buyer profile is fairly clear in the data. Separate houses make up 99% of homes, rentals are relatively low at about 13.3%, and 42.3% of residents are managers and professionals. The top occupations are professionals at 28.1%, clerical and administrative workers at 15.2%, and managers at 14.2%, which points to a stable, owner-occupier leaning suburb with a solid white-collar base. A median family income of $2,397 per week also suggests many households are established rather than entry-level. In practical terms, Mount Colah is likely to appeal most to buyers who want land, bedrooms and a quieter day-to-day environment. It may suit downsizers who still want a house, as well as families with children or multi-generational households. It will suit apartment-focused buyers, highly walkability-driven professionals, or those wanting a more vibrant café-and-retail lifestyle less well, because the suburb is much more residential than urban in character.
What are the pros and cons of living in Mount Colah NSW 2079?
The main trade-off in Mount Colah NSW 2079 is that you get space, greenery and a settled family-friendly setting, but you give up some convenience and urban energy. What Mount Colah does well is fairly clear. It has a strong safety rating of 4 out of 5, high tree cover at 39.18%, direct train access on the T1 line, and an overwhelmingly separate-house housing mix, which is exactly what many family and upgrade buyers want. The bushland and national park setting also gives the suburb a more relaxed feel than many busier Sydney locations. What buyers give up is immediacy. Walkability is only 2 out of 5, culture is 2 out of 5, bus services are limited, and the CBD commute is not short. That means Mount Colah will feel less convenient for buyers who want shops, dining and multiple transport options close at hand. Still, for the right buyer, especially someone prioritising house living, a greener environment and a calmer pace, those compromises may be well worth making.
What are property prices like in Mount Colah NSW 2079?
Property prices in Mount Colah NSW 2079 are mid-range to expensive by Sydney buyer expectations, with houses sitting firmly in family-home territory and apartments offering a smaller, more limited entry point. In the past six months, house sales in Mount Colah recorded a median price of about $1.67 million across 26 sales, with the middle market broadly running from around $1.45 million at the 25th percentile to $1.80 million at the 75th percentile. Apartments were much less common, with 7 sales, and a median price of about $1.25 million. For buyers, that pricing says Mount Colah is not a budget suburb, but it can still represent value compared with more prestigious Upper North Shore pockets if your priority is a freestanding home and a bushland setting. The trade-off is that you are still paying a meaningful amount for that family-oriented lifestyle and train access, while accepting a longer CBD commute and lower walkability. Buyers focused on land and house stock may see the value more clearly than those chasing apartment convenience or a lower entry price.
