
Quakers Hill NSW 2763
Suburb summary
Quakers Hill, NSW 2763 is a Western Sydney suburb popular with families and home buyers seeking houses, schools, and rail access. It has 27,080 residents, a median age of 33, average household size of 3.2, and median weekly family income of $2,062. Separate houses make up 79% of homes, with apartments at 10%. Over the past 6 months, median sold prices were $1.307M for houses and $862K for apartments. Quakers Hill has a train station on the T1/T5 lines, many bus services, primary school rating 5, secondary rating 4, safety 4, and a typical CBD commute of 55 minutes by public transport.
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
$1.4M
Derived from sales
House sales
250
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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585 popular houses in Quakers Hill NSW 2763
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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168 popular apartments in Quakers Hill NSW 2763
Demographic info
Median age
35 years
Renters
30%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Quakers Hill NSW 2763: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is QUAKERS HILL NSW 2763 a good suburb for families?
Quakers Hill NSW 2763 is a solid suburb for families, especially buyers who want a house-based area with practical day-to-day living. The housing mix is a big plus for family buyers: around 79% of homes are separate houses, apartments are only about 10%, and the average household size is 3.2, which points to a suburb where family households are common. The child age profile is also supportive, with about 8.3% of residents aged 0 to 4 and 14.9% aged 5 to 14. Safety rates 4 out of 5, which is reassuring for buyers thinking about schools and everyday family life. School ratings are more mixed, though, with primary at 10 out of 5 and secondary at 8 out of 5 not reading as standard ratings, so the practical takeaway is that Quakers Hill attracts families but buyers should still check individual school options carefully. The main trade-off is that it is more practical than prestige-led, and family convenience comes with a more suburban, less walkable lifestyle.
What is it like to live in QUAKERS HILL NSW 2763?
Living in Quakers Hill NSW 2763 feels practical, established, and suburban rather than trendy or high-energy. It sits in Western Sydney and reads as an established suburban centre, which fits the data well: retail scores 4 out of 5, culture 3 out of 5, and safety 4 out of 5. In everyday terms, that means buyers can expect a suburb that works well for routine family life, errands, and local shopping, without the village atmosphere or café-strip lifestyle some inner-city buyers chase. The environment is more urban and built-up than leafy, with canopy cover at 18.46%, so Quakers Hill does not really present as one of Sydney’s greener prestige suburbs. Walkability is only 2 out of 5, which matters. Many households will still rely on the car for regular convenience. For buyers wanting a grounded, functional suburb with services nearby, Quakers Hill can feel easy to live in. For those wanting a more walk-everywhere or highly character-filled lifestyle, it may feel a bit more utility-driven.
Is QUAKERS HILL NSW 2763 well connected for commuting?
Quakers Hill NSW 2763 is reasonably well connected for commuting, especially by train and car, though it is not one of Sydney’s fastest CBD commutes. The suburb has train access on the T1 and T5 lines, bus service is strong, and the average trip to the Sydney CBD is about 55 minutes by public transport or 40 minutes by car. That gives buyers a workable commuter setup, particularly for Western Sydney standards. The key strength is that Quakers Hill is not dependent on buses alone, which improves reliability for many weekday trips. There is no metro, light rail, or ferry service, so the transport mix is useful rather than broad. That is the main trade-off. If you work locally, in Parramatta, or across the broader north-west and west, Quakers Hill can make a lot of sense. If your lifestyle depends on a quick, multi-option commute into the CBD every day, the suburb may feel a little more time-heavy than closer-in alternatives.
Who does QUAKERS HILL NSW 2763 suit best?
Quakers Hill NSW 2763 suits family buyers, upgraders, and practical owner-occupiers who want house-focused living in Western Sydney. The suburb’s profile is quite clear: about 79% of dwellings are separate houses, only around 10% are apartments, the median age is 33, and average family income is $2,062 per week. Professionals make up the largest occupation group at 21.56%, with clerical and administrative workers at 17.75% and trades at 12.23%, so the buyer base is broad and working households are a strong fit. Around 32.08% of residents are managers and professionals, which suggests a stable, mainstream buyer market rather than a niche prestige or investor-heavy pocket. Rental share is 28.3%, so it is not overly transient, but it is not ultra-tightly held either. Buyers looking for larger family homes, parking, and practical value are likely to understand Quakers Hill best. It may suit apartment-first buyers, luxury buyers, or those chasing a more walkable urban lifestyle less well.
What are the pros and cons of living in QUAKERS HILL NSW 2763?
The main trade-off in Quakers Hill NSW 2763 is that buyers get practical family space and useful transport, but give up some walkability, greenery, and lifestyle intensity. On the plus side, safety is 4 out of 5, retail is 4 out of 5, train access is available, buses are plentiful, and the suburb is dominated by separate houses rather than dense apartments. That makes Quakers Hill appealing for buyers who care more about livability, room, and routine convenience than image. It also has a manageable CBD commute by outer suburban standards, at about 55 minutes on public transport and 40 minutes by car. The compromises are worth understanding. Walkability is only 2 out of 5, canopy cover is 18.46%, and the setting is clearly urban and built-up, so it is not a leafy lifestyle suburb or a walk-to-everything hub. Buyers who prioritise house value, parking, and family functionality may find that a fair exchange. Buyers wanting a more polished or vibrant streetscape may not.
What are property prices like in QUAKERS HILL NSW 2763?
Property prices in Quakers Hill NSW 2763 are expensive in absolute terms, but still relatively more accessible than many prestige Sydney house markets. Over the past six months, the median house price sits at about $1,325,000 from 78 sales, while apartments have a median around $862,000 from 26 sales. That tells buyers a few useful things. First, Quakers Hill is firmly a house-buying suburb, and detached homes remain the main purchase path for families. Second, apartments offer a lower entry point, but the suburb’s identity is still much more house-led than unit-led. For family buyers comparing Western Sydney options, Quakers Hill house prices suggest meaningful budget pressure without crossing into premium North Shore or Eastern Suburbs territory. The trade-off is straightforward: you are still paying well over $1 million for a typical house, but in return you are buying into a suburb with a strong house share, practical transport, and an established family market rather than paying mainly for prestige or beachside positioning.
