Pyrmont NSW 2009 property reports

Pyrmont NSW 2009

Suburb

Suburb summary

Pyrmont, NSW 2009 is a Sydney harbour-side suburb in the City & Eastern Suburbs, known for an urban waterfront lifestyle, strong walkability, retail and culture. Popular searches like Pyrmont property market, Pyrmont apartments, and living in Pyrmont fit a suburb with 12,813 residents, median age 34, 94% apartments, 60.71% renters, light rail access, ferry service, many buses, and average CBD commute times of 15 minutes by public transport and 10 minutes by car. In the past 6 months, Pyrmont recorded 56 apartment sales with a median price of $960,000.

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Demographic info

Median age

37 years

Renters

60%

Top 3 occupations

Professionals30%
Managers20%
Technicians and Trades Workers10%

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Living in Pyrmont NSW 2009: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Pyrmont NSW 2009 a good suburb for families?

Pyrmont NSW 2009 is a mixed rather than standout option for families. For buyers asking whether Pyrmont is a good suburb for families, the answer depends on whether you value inner-city convenience more than traditional family space. Around 4.5% of residents are aged 0 to 4 and 4.3% are aged 5 to 14, so there are clearly children in the area, but the housing mix is heavily apartment-based, with about 94% apartments and only 1% separate houses. The average household size of 2.2 also points to generally smaller households rather than classic large-family living. For some families, that can still work well. Pyrmont gives you strong day-to-day convenience, harbour access and a close-in city lifestyle that can suit professional parents who want to stay near work. The trade-off is that it is denser, more urban and likely less suited to buyers wanting a quieter, house-based family-friendly suburb with more private outdoor space and a stronger sense of school-led suburban living.

What is it like to live in Pyrmont NSW 2009?

Living in Pyrmont NSW 2009 feels urban, waterside and highly convenient. If you are searching what it is like to live in Pyrmont, the suburb lifestyle is shaped by its harbourfront position, strong walkability and dense inner-city setting. Pyrmont sits in the City & Eastern Suburbs region and has an urban waterfront character, with very strong scores for walkability and retail at 5 out of 5, plus culture at 4 out of 5. That translates into a daily life where cafés, dining, light rail stops and harbour walks are all part of the appeal. The suburb does not read as leafy in the traditional Sydney sense, with canopy cover at 18.62%, so the feel is more built-up than green. Safety is rated 1 out of 5, which means buyers should be realistic rather than romantic about the lifestyle. Pyrmont will appeal most to those who want energy, access and convenience, but it is less likely to suit buyers seeking a calm, low-density suburban atmosphere.

Is Pyrmont NSW 2009 well connected for commuting?

Pyrmont NSW 2009 is well connected for commuting, especially for buyers who rely on public transport and want close CBD access. For commuting to Sydney CBD, Pyrmont performs strongly: the average public transport commute is about 15 minutes and driving is around 10 minutes on a workday average. The suburb also benefits from many bus services, direct light rail access via the L1, ferry access, and nearby train and metro connections through Central and Barangaroo rather than stations located directly inside Pyrmont itself. That is an important distinction for commuters. Pyrmont is very convenient, but some trips still depend on walking to nearby hubs or combining transport modes rather than stepping onto a suburban train platform within the suburb. For many inner-city buyers, that is a very acceptable trade-off because the overall access is still strong. Buyers who want multiple transport choices and a short CBD run should find Pyrmont attractive, while those who insist on a direct local train station may see the transport picture as strong but not perfect.

Who does Pyrmont NSW 2009 suit best?

Pyrmont NSW 2009 suits professionals, managers and buyers who want an inner-city apartment lifestyle best. The resident profile points clearly in that direction: professionals make up about 34.6% of occupations, managers 20.6%, and clerical and administrative workers 11.3%. Around 55.2% of residents are managers or professionals overall, the median personal income is $1,111 per week, the median family income is $2,670 per week, and the median age is 34. This is a relatively young, working, urban market. The housing mix reinforces that buyer profile. About 94% of homes are apartments, only 1% are separate houses, and roughly 60.7% of homes are rented, which suggests a more active, higher-turnover inner-city environment rather than a tightly held house suburb. Pyrmont will usually suit professionals, couples, downsizers who still want city energy, and some investors. It may suit large families or buyers wanting land, but much less naturally than suburbs with a stronger detached-house market and a more traditional family layout.

What are the pros and cons of living in Pyrmont NSW 2009?

The main trade-off in Pyrmont NSW 2009 is that you get excellent inner-city convenience and waterfront lifestyle, but you give up some of the calm, space and traditional neighbourhood feel found in lower-density suburbs. Pyrmont does a lot well for buyers who value access. Walkability and retail both score 5 out of 5, culture scores 4 out of 5, there is light rail in the suburb, ferry service, many buses, and nearby train and metro connections. The CBD commute is also short by Sydney standards, which is a genuine everyday advantage. What buyers should know about Pyrmont is that this convenience comes with a denser apartment-led environment. With only about 1% separate houses and 94% apartments, it is not a classic backyard suburb. Tree canopy is also modest at 18.62%, so the feel is more urban than leafy. Safety is another consideration. For the right buyer, especially one prioritising lifestyle and commute, Pyrmont can still be an excellent fit despite those compromises.

What are property prices like in Pyrmont NSW 2009?

Property prices in Pyrmont NSW 2009 are expensive for apartments, though the suburb offers a more accessible entry point than many prestige harbourside house markets. In the most recent six months of recorded sales, apartments had 46 sales with a median price of $1.05 million, a 25th percentile around $815,000 and a 75th percentile around $1.26 million. That suggests a fairly broad apartment market, with entry-level stock available below the median but higher-spec homes pushing well beyond it. For buyers researching house prices in Pyrmont, there were only 2 house sales, so the house data is too thin to treat as a reliable suburb-wide benchmark. In practical terms, buying property in Pyrmont usually means buying an apartment and paying for location, CBD access and waterfront lifestyle. The trade-off is that while apartments can offer strong convenience, buyers wanting land, family space or a conventional house choice will find very limited supply and far less flexibility than in house-led suburbs.