Oakhurst NSW 2761 property reports

Oakhurst NSW 2761

Suburb

Suburb summary

Oakhurst, NSW 2761 is a residential suburb in Western Sydney with 6,955 residents across 2.0268 sq km. Popular with families, Oakhurst has an average household size of 3.5, median age 32, and 100% separate houses. Median weekly family income is $1,878. Australia is the top birth country (54.41%), followed by the Philippines (12.7%). The suburb offers many bus services, nearby train access, and average CBD travel times of 80 minutes by public transport or 40 minutes by car. In the past 6 months, Oakhurst house sales median was $1.10M from 20 sales, supporting search interest in Oakhurst property, Oakhurst house prices, and Oakhurst NSW lifestyle.

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

$1M

Derived from sales

House sales

51

In past 12 months

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Pocket Price Map

Pocket price distribution map preview

Explore higher and lower-priced pockets across the suburb.

Demographic info

Median age

34 years

Renters

30%

Top 3 occupations

Clerical and Administrative Workers20%
Machinery Operators and Drivers20%
Managers10%

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Living in Oakhurst NSW 2761: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Oakhurst NSW 2761 a good suburb for families?

Oakhurst NSW 2761 is a solid suburb for families, especially buyers who want a house-oriented area with a clear family presence. The housing mix is a big part of that story: Oakhurst is overwhelmingly made up of separate houses rather than apartments, and the average household size is 3.5 people, which points to a practical suburban setup for larger households. Children are also well represented, with about 7.0% of residents aged 0 to 4 and 15.2% aged 5 to 14, so it does read as a suburb where family life is a normal part of the local rhythm. School ratings are strong at 8 out of 10 for both primary and secondary, which adds weight for buyers focused on schools and long-term livability. The trade-off is that Oakhurst is not the kind of suburb buyers usually choose for prestige, walk-everywhere convenience, or a particularly polished village feel. Safety sits at a mid-range 3 out of 5, so while it is a workable family suburb, buyers wanting a more peaceful or higher-amenity environment may compare it with stronger-performing family areas in other parts of Sydney.

What is it like to live in Oakhurst NSW 2761?

Living in Oakhurst NSW 2761 feels practical, suburban, and residential rather than fashionable or high-energy. Oakhurst sits in Western Sydney and reads as a straightforward suburban area with an urban built-up setting, so the lifestyle is more about day-to-day functionality than scenery or destination appeal. Walkability is 3 out of 5, which suggests some local errands may be manageable without always getting in the car, but retail and culture both sit at 2 out of 5, so this is not a suburb people usually choose for café culture, nightlife, or a strong entertainment scene. Safety is 3 out of 5, which reinforces that the overall feel is mixed but serviceable rather than especially calm or especially vibrant. That trade-off will matter differently depending on the buyer. If you want a house suburb with a simple, suburban lifestyle, Oakhurst can make sense. If you are looking for leafy streets, a strong village atmosphere, beach access, or a more walkable lifestyle, living in Oakhurst may feel a bit limited.

Is Oakhurst NSW 2761 well connected for commuting?

Oakhurst NSW 2761 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s easiest suburbs for public transport-based CBD travel. The suburb does not have its own train station, but rail access is nearby via the T1 and T5 lines around Blacktown, and bus services are rated as many, which helps with everyday movement and station connections. That means public transport is workable rather than seamless. For drivers, the average trip to the Sydney CBD is about 40 minutes, which is a more competitive result than the suburb’s public transport time of around 80 minutes. So yes, Oakhurst can work for commuters, especially those who drive or are comfortable using buses to connect into the rail network. The trade-off is clear though: if you want direct train access, multiple transport modes, or a quicker public transport commute to the city, Oakhurst is less convenient than better-connected inner and middle-ring suburbs. Buyers who mainly work locally, in Western Sydney, or split time between car and public transport may find that balance much easier to live with.

Who does Oakhurst NSW 2761 suit best?

Oakhurst NSW 2761 suits best buyers who want a house-focused Western Sydney suburb with room for family life and a more grounded price point than many prestige areas. The suburb is entirely dominated by separate houses, with virtually no apartment market, so it naturally appeals to buyers who prioritise internal space, yards, and a traditional suburban setup. The median age is 32, average household size is 3.5, and family incomes are moderate rather than high-end, which together suggest a younger, practical, working-household profile. Occupation data is also mixed across clerical and administrative workers, machinery operators and drivers, and professionals, so Oakhurst does not read as narrowly corporate or prestige-driven. That means Oakhurst can be a good fit for first-home family buyers, upgraders on a budget, or households that want more house than apartment living. It may suit buyers less well if they want a prestige demographic, a dense professional inner-city feel, or a low-maintenance apartment lifestyle. For those buyers, Oakhurst may feel too suburban and too car-dependent in parts.

What are the pros and cons of living in Oakhurst NSW 2761?

The main trade-off in Oakhurst NSW 2761 is that you get a very house-based, family-sized suburban environment, but you give up some convenience, amenity, and lifestyle polish in return. On the plus side, Oakhurst offers what many buyers in Western Sydney still want most: separate houses, larger household-friendly living, strong school ratings, and decent bus coverage. Driving access to the CBD is more realistic than the public transport time suggests, and the suburb’s younger age profile supports its appeal for active family households. The compromise is that Oakhurst is not especially strong on walkability, retail, culture, or greenery. Tree canopy is low at 10.33%, there is no beach access, no ferry, no light rail, and no metro, while train access is only nearby rather than in the suburb itself. Safety is middle-of-the-road rather than standout. Buyers who care most about café strips, urban convenience, or a greener and more refined streetscape will notice those limitations. Still, for the right buyer, especially one focused on house living and school-age family practicality, Oakhurst can still be a sensible fit.

What are property prices like in Oakhurst NSW 2761?

Property prices in Oakhurst NSW 2761 are mid-range by Sydney house standards, though they can still feel expensive for buyers stretching for a freestanding home. In the recent sales sample available, houses had a median price of $1.10 million, with an average around $1.16 million across 19 sales. The middle of the market looks fairly tight, with the 25th percentile at $1.05 million and the 75th percentile at $1.19 million, while stronger homes pushed up to about $1.40 million at the 90th percentile and $1.685 million at the top end. That tells buyers Oakhurst is not a bargain-basement suburb, but it is still a more accessible house market than many established family suburbs closer to the CBD or coast. In practical terms, buying property in Oakhurst is about paying for a detached-house lifestyle rather than prestige or premium convenience. The trade-off is that buyers can access a house market at a lower level than blue-chip Sydney areas, but they are accepting a more modest lifestyle offering and a longer public transport commute.