
Peakhurst NSW 2210
Suburb summary
Peakhurst, NSW 2210 is a St George suburb in Sydney covering 3.7065 sq km, with a population of 10,539 and median age 41. Popular among home buyers and families, Peakhurst real estate is dominated by houses, which make up 87% of homes, while apartments account for 6%. Over the past 6 months, median sold prices were $1.70M for houses and $815K for apartments. The suburb has many bus services, a train connection, and CBD commute times of 45 minutes by public transport or 25 minutes by car. Peakhurst offers River/Creek adjacent surroundings, 17.72% canopy cover, and solid school ratings.
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
111
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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242 popular houses in Peakhurst NSW 2210
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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129 popular apartments in Peakhurst NSW 2210
Demographic info
Median age
41 years
Renters
30%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Peakhurst NSW 2210: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is PEAKHURST NSW 2210 a good suburb for families?
PEAKHURST NSW 2210 is a solid suburb for families, especially buyers who want a house-oriented area with credible school access rather than an inner-city lifestyle. The schooling profile stands out, with both primary and secondary education rated 8 out of 10, and the housing mix is strongly family-friendly in practical terms, with 87% separate houses and only 6% apartments. Children are well represented too, with 6.0% of residents aged 0 to 4 and 12.8% aged 5 to 14, while the average household size of 2.8 suggests many family households rather than mostly singles or very small households. Safety sits at 3 out of 5, which points to a reasonable but not exceptional family setting. That means PEAKHURST can work well for buyers prioritising space, schooling and a suburban feel, but it may feel less peaceful or polished than buyers targeting the most tightly held, prestige family suburbs.
What is it like to live in PEAKHURST NSW 2210?
Living in PEAKHURST NSW 2210 feels practical, established and suburban, with a straightforward St George lifestyle rather than a high-gloss village atmosphere. The suburb character is residential with some light industry, so day-to-day life is more functional than picturesque, and that is important for buyers to understand early. There is some natural appeal from nearby river and creek surroundings, but PEAKHURST is not a beachside suburb and canopy cover at 17.72% means it is not especially leafy by Sydney standards. Walkability, retail and culture all sit around the middle to lower-middle range at 3, 3 and 2 out of 5, so daily errands are manageable but this is not one of those walk-everywhere suburbs with a strong café and dining scene. For many buyers, that trade-off is worthwhile because PEAKHURST offers a grounded, house-based lifestyle with less hype and often better space than more polished inner areas.
Is PEAKHURST NSW 2210 well connected for commuting?
PEAKHURST NSW 2210 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but the transport picture is mixed rather than standout. There is no train station in the suburb itself, although T4 and T8 line access is available nearby through stations such as Mortdale, Riverwood and Narwee, and bus service levels are strong with many routes available. That helps explain why the average public transport commute to the Sydney CBD is about 45 minutes, while driving averages around 25 minutes in typical conditions. There is no metro, light rail or ferry service, so buyers are mainly relying on buses, nearby train connections and the road network. In practical terms, PEAKHURST can suit commuters who are comfortable with a bus-to-train pattern or who drive regularly, but it is less convenient for buyers who want to walk to a station or have several transport modes right on the doorstep.
Who does PEAKHURST NSW 2210 suit best?
PEAKHURST NSW 2210 suits families, upgrader buyers and established households who want a predominantly house-based suburb in the St George area. The housing mix is the clearest clue: 87% of homes are separate houses and only 6% are apartments, which points to a suburb built more around land and family living than high-density convenience. The median age is 41, average household size is 2.8, and renter share is 22.9%, all of which suggest a relatively settled owner-occupier profile rather than a highly transient one. Professionals are the largest occupational group at 20.5%, followed by clerical and administrative workers and trades, which gives PEAKHURST a broad middle-ring working and professional buyer base. It may suit apartment-first buyers, ultra-urban professionals or people chasing a lively nightlife scene less well. Instead, PEAKHURST tends to appeal to buyers who value space, stability and a more practical suburban setup.
What are the pros and cons of living in PEAKHURST NSW 2210?
The main trade-off in PEAKHURST NSW 2210 is that buyers get strong suburban housing stock and reasonable connectivity, but they give up some lifestyle polish and transport convenience in return. On the plus side, PEAKHURST is dominated by separate houses, has many bus services, nearby train access, and a manageable average drive to the CBD of around 25 minutes. It also has decent retail and walkability at 3 out of 5, plus some environmental relief from nearby river and creek areas. On the other hand, culture is only 2 out of 5, safety is a moderate 3 out of 5, and there is no station, metro, light rail or ferry service within the suburb itself. That means buyers wanting a vibrant café scene, stronger walk-everywhere living or top-tier public transport may find the suburb more functional than exciting. For households focused on house living, schools and day-to-day practicality, though, PEAKHURST can still be a very sensible fit.
What are property prices like in PEAKHURST NSW 2210?
Property prices in PEAKHURST NSW 2210 sit in the expensive range for many Sydney buyers, especially if you are targeting a house. Over the most recent six months of sales, houses recorded a median price of $1.66 million from 32 sales, with the middle market broadly running from about $1.50 million at the 25th percentile to $1.85 million at the 75th percentile. Apartments were meaningfully lower, with a median of $815,000 across 25 sales, although upper-end apartment sales pushed well beyond that. In buyer terms, PEAKHURST house prices suggest a genuine family-home market where land and house supply still matter, while apartments offer a lower entry point for buyers wanting the suburb without stretching to a freestanding home. The trade-off is straightforward: houses bring more space and family appeal, but budget pressure is real, and apartments can improve affordability while giving up some of that classic suburban house lifestyle.
