
Mulgrave NSW 2756
Suburb summary
Mulgrave NSW 2756 is a rural residential suburb in Sydney’s Outer West, covering 4.0198 sq km with a population of 92 and low density of 22.89 people per sq km. Popular searches like Mulgrave NSW suburb profile, Mulgrave property market, and living in Mulgrave NSW fit its house-dominated character: 100% separate houses, no apartments, average household size 2.8, and 41.67% renters. Median weekly personal income is $619 and family income is $1,875. Recent Mulgrave house sales were limited at 2 in the past 6 months, with a median sold price of $1.53M. Public transport is modest, with nearby T1 Windsor access and an 80-minute CBD commute.
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
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Derived from sales
House sales
10
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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2 popular houses in Mulgrave NSW 2756
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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Demographic info
Median age
40 years
Renters
30%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Mulgrave NSW 2756: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Mulgrave NSW 2756 a good suburb for families?
Mulgrave NSW 2756 is a mixed option for families rather than a standout family-friendly suburb. The suburb is almost entirely separate housing, which usually suits buyers who want more space and a less apartment-driven setting, and the average household size of 2.8 suggests established family-style households are part of the local mix. On schools, the data is uneven: the primary rating sits at 8 out of 10 equivalent to 4 out of 5, which is a positive, while the secondary rating is 6 out of 10 or 3 out of 5, so outcomes are more solid than exceptional overall. Safety comes in at 2 out of 5, which means buyers should be careful about calling Mulgrave strongly family-oriented without qualification. For families wanting a house-based suburb in Sydney’s Outer West, Mulgrave can still work, but it is better for buyers prioritising land and a quieter outer setting than those chasing top-tier schooling and a stronger all-round family profile.
What is it like to live in Mulgrave NSW 2756?
Living in Mulgrave NSW 2756 feels practical, low-density and outer-suburban, with a rural residential character rather than a polished village or walk-everywhere lifestyle. That gives Mulgrave a more spread-out everyday feel, and the housing mix supports that impression because the suburb is overwhelmingly made up of separate houses rather than apartments. In daily life, though, convenience is limited. Walkability is 1 out of 5, retail is 2 out of 5 and culture is 2 out of 5, so this is not the kind of suburb where most buyers can expect strong café strips, lively local retail or an especially active street scene. Safety is also a softer point at 2 out of 5. For some buyers, that trade-off is acceptable because Mulgrave offers a less dense, more house-focused environment in the Outer West. For others, especially those wanting a more vibrant or easy-on-foot lifestyle, Mulgrave may feel too sparse.
Is Mulgrave NSW 2756 well connected for commuting?
Mulgrave NSW 2756 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it comes with clear trade-offs. The suburb does have train access on the T1 Windsor line, which is an important plus for buyers who want a public transport option instead of relying entirely on the car. That said, the broader transport picture is not especially strong. Bus services are limited, there is no metro, no light rail and no ferry, and the average public transport commute to the Sydney CBD is about 80 minutes. Driving is materially quicker at around 60 minutes, but that is still a long commute by Sydney standards. In buyer terms, Mulgrave can suit people whose work pattern is flexible, hybrid or not CBD-dependent every day. If your priority is a short, multi-option commute with strong public transport convenience, Mulgrave is less compelling. If you mainly want house-style living and can tolerate a longer trip, it remains workable.
Who does Mulgrave NSW 2756 suit best?
Mulgrave NSW 2756 suits best buyers who want a detached house environment in Sydney’s Outer West and are comfortable with a more practical, less lifestyle-led suburb profile. The suburb is 100% separate housing in the available mix, with effectively no apartment presence, so it naturally appeals more to house buyers than to apartment-focused professionals or downsizers wanting low-maintenance stock. The resident profile also points to a fairly established community: the median age is 44, managers are the largest occupation group at 28%, and the rental share is about 41.7%, which suggests a mixed owner-occupier and tenant market rather than a tightly held prestige pocket. Family income is moderate rather than elite, so Mulgrave is more grounded than aspirational in tone. It may suit tradies, managers, multi-car households and buyers wanting space over walkability. It is likely to suit less those who want a lively café culture, a younger urban demographic or a dense convenience-driven lifestyle.
What are the pros and cons of living in Mulgrave NSW 2756?
The main trade-off in Mulgrave NSW 2756 is that you get a house-based outer-west setting, but you give up a lot of convenience and lifestyle intensity in return. On the plus side, Mulgrave is overwhelmingly detached housing, has train access, and offers a rural residential feel that some buyers find appealing if they want breathing room rather than density. Driving to the CBD averages around 60 minutes, which is long but still more manageable than the 80-minute public transport trip. On the downside, the suburb is not especially walkable, with walkability at 1 out of 5, and retail and culture both sit at 2 out of 5, so everyday amenity is fairly limited. Safety is also 2 out of 5, which is worth weighing carefully. Buyers who most value land, houses and a lower-density setting may find Mulgrave a sensible fit. Buyers chasing convenience, vibrancy and a shorter commute may feel the compromises more strongly.
What are property prices like in Mulgrave NSW 2756?
Property prices in Mulgrave NSW 2756 look expensive at the house level based on the recent sales evidence available, but the current data is very thin. In the last six months, the suburb shows one recorded house sale, with a median price of $7,455,000, and because there was only one sale, the average, median and range all sit at that same figure. That tells buyers there has been at least one very high-value house transaction in Mulgrave, but it does not give a broad read on typical house prices across the suburb. In practical terms, this means buyers should be cautious about treating that number as the standard entry point for Mulgrave. It may reflect a specific premium property rather than the suburb’s full market. The trade-off here is clarity: Mulgrave may include expensive house stock, but with such limited recent turnover, buyers need to assess each listing on its own merits rather than relying too heavily on a single suburb-wide headline figure.
