
Pleasure Point NSW 2172
Suburb summary
Pleasure Point, NSW 2172 is a small Sydney suburb in the South West & Macarthur region, popular for buyers searching Pleasure Point real estate, houses for sale in Pleasure Point, and family-friendly suburbs near Liverpool. It covers 1.55 sq km, has 528 residents, median age 35, average household size 3.5, and low rental share at 9.21%. Housing is entirely separate houses, with no apartments recorded. The suburb sits beside river or creek environments with 41.78% canopy cover. Local ratings show strong safety (4/5), modest culture (2/5), and limited retail and walkability (1/5 each). Recent house sales data shows 1 sale in 6 months at a median price of $1.435 million.
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
3
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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13 popular houses in Pleasure Point NSW 2172
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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Demographic info
Median age
39 years
Renters
10%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Pleasure Point NSW 2172: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Pleasure Point NSW 2172 a good suburb for families?
Pleasure Point NSW 2172 looks like a solid suburb for families, especially buyers who want a house-focused setting rather than a dense apartment area. The housing mix is very family-oriented, with separate houses making up 100% of homes and apartments essentially absent, and the average household size of 3.5 also points to larger family households being common. Children are well represented too, with around 7.4% of residents aged 0 to 4 and 17.1% aged 5 to 14, which suggests Pleasure Point is good for kids in a practical, lived-in way rather than just in marketing language. Safety rates 4 out of 5, which is encouraging for buyers thinking about day-to-day family life. The trade-off is that school ratings are not clearly strong from the available suburb-level indicators, so buyers focused heavily on top-tier school performance should still check individual schooling options carefully.
What is it like to live in Pleasure Point NSW 2172?
Living in Pleasure Point NSW 2172 feels calm, residential and a little tucked away, with a riverside setting that gives the suburb a more secluded lifestyle than many Sydney suburbs. Its character comes through as bayside residential, and the river or creek surroundings plus strong canopy cover of 41.78% give it a greener feel than more built-up parts of South West Sydney. For buyers asking what it is like to live in Pleasure Point, the lifestyle looks more peaceful and home-based than walk-to-everything urban. Safety is a solid 4 out of 5, which adds to that comfortable feel. The trade-off is convenience: walkability is only 1 out of 5, retail is 1 out of 5, and culture is 2 out of 5, so day-to-day living in Pleasure Point is likely to suit buyers who prioritise space and quiet over café strips, shopping, and frequent local activity.
Is Pleasure Point NSW 2172 well connected for commuting?
Pleasure Point NSW 2172 is less convenient for commuting than many Sydney suburbs, especially if you want fast public transport access. The suburb does not currently have train, metro, or light rail service in the suburb itself, bus access is limited, and ferry access is not available. That shows up clearly in the commute times: the average public transport trip to the Sydney CBD is about 155 minutes, while driving is much quicker at around 35 minutes. So if you are asking whether Pleasure Point is well connected for commuting, the answer is mixed at best and really leans toward car dependence. The upside is that buyers who work locally, drive regularly, or only commute to the CBD occasionally may still find the trade-off acceptable. But for daily city commuters who want strong public transport, Pleasure Point is unlikely to feel especially convenient.
Who does Pleasure Point NSW 2172 suit best?
Pleasure Point NSW 2172 suits best buyers who want a detached home lifestyle in a quieter, established residential pocket rather than a high-density or highly transient suburb. The suburb is entirely house-based, with 100% separate houses and virtually no apartments, which will appeal to buyers looking for more internal space, outdoor area, and a traditional suburban setup. It also appears relatively tightly held, with only about 9.2% of homes rented, and the resident profile includes a strong professional and managerial presence, with professionals at 20.7% and managers at 18.6%. Median family income of $2,538 per week supports the picture of a stable family suburb. Pleasure Point may particularly suit upsizers, families, and buyers wanting a quieter base. It may suit apartment-focused buyers, ultra-convenience seekers, or CBD commuters less well, because the suburb trades accessibility and activity for space and calm.
What are the pros and cons of living in Pleasure Point NSW 2172?
The main trade-off in Pleasure Point NSW 2172 is that you get space, greenery and a quieter family-style setting, but you give up everyday convenience and public transport access. On the plus side, Pleasure Point has strong buyer appeal if you want a house-dominant suburb with a lower-density feel, good tree cover at 41.78%, river or creek surroundings, and a solid safety rating of 4 out of 5. The low rental share also suggests a more settled owner-occupier environment. On the downside, walkability and retail both score just 1 out of 5, culture is 2 out of 5, and there is no train, metro, light rail or ferry service in the suburb, so many errands and commutes will rely on driving. For the right buyer, that is a worthwhile compromise. For buyers who want lively streets, easy public transport and a walkable local centre, it may feel too isolated.
What are property prices like in Pleasure Point NSW 2172?
Property prices in Pleasure Point NSW 2172 are hard to benchmark cleanly from recent suburb sales because there were no sold-price results returned in the latest suburb-level sales history search. In practical buyer terms, that usually points to a low-volume market rather than a highly traded one, which often happens in smaller, tightly held house suburbs like Pleasure Point. Given the suburb is entirely separate houses with almost no apartment stock, buyers should expect the market to be more about house budgets than unit entry points. That can make buying property in Pleasure Point feel less straightforward, because fewer sales mean fewer obvious comparables and sometimes more negotiation uncertainty around fair value. The trade-off is that tightly held suburbs can appeal strongly to buyers who want long-term owner-occupier areas. If you are considering Pleasure Point, it is better approached as a house market where stock and comparable evidence may be limited.
