Redfern NSW 2016 property reports

Redfern NSW 2016

Suburb

Suburb summary

Redfern, NSW 2016 is an inner-city Sydney suburb in the City & Eastern Suburbs region, known for urban regeneration, strong transport and walkability. Redfern has a population of 13,213 across 1.1717 sq km, with high density at 11,276.78 people per sq km, median age 35, median weekly personal income of $991 and family income of $2,592. Housing is apartment-led, with 3,945 apartments and 76% apartment share. In the past 6 months, median sold prices were $925,000 for apartments and $2.21M for houses. Redfern station serves T2, T3 and T8 lines, with a 5-minute CBD public transport commute.

Pocket Price Distribution

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Suburb median

$2.2M

Derived from sales

House sales

72

In past 12 months

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Pocket Price Map

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Apartment projects

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PROJECTS MAP

Apartment projects map preview

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Demographic info

Median age

36 years

Renters

60%

Top 3 occupations

Professionals40%
Managers20%
Technicians and Trades Workers10%

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Living in Redfern NSW 2016: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Redfern NSW 2016 a good suburb for families?

Redfern NSW 2016 is a mixed rather than standout option for families. It has some strengths that buyers with children will notice straight away, including excellent walkability at 5 out of 5, strong retail and culture scores at 4 out of 5, and very fast access to the CBD, which can make school runs, work commutes and after-school activities easier. There is also a real professional population here, with 58.1% of residents in manager and professional roles, which often supports demand from established working households. The trade-off is that Redfern is a dense inner-city suburb with a very apartment-heavy housing mix. Apartments make up 76% of homes, separate houses are almost absent, average household size is 2, and the safety rating is 1 out of 5. The share of younger children is also modest, with 3.6% aged 0 to 4 and 3.4% aged 5 to 14. So while Redfern can work for families who value convenience and city access, buyers wanting a quieter, house-based, more traditionally family-oriented suburb may find it less suitable.

What is it like to live in Redfern NSW 2016?

Living in Redfern NSW 2016 feels urban, energetic and highly convenient. This is an inner-city suburb in the City & Eastern Suburbs region with a strong walkability score of 5 out of 5, retail at 4 out of 5, and culture at 4 out of 5, so daily life tends to be active and easy to navigate on foot. The suburb character points to Indigenous heritage and urban regeneration, which gives Redfern a distinct identity rather than a generic city-fringe feel. With 23.07% canopy cover, it has some tree presence, but it still reads more built-up than leafy. For buyers asking what it is like to live in Redfern, the appeal is access, atmosphere and proximity to work, dining and everyday services. The trade-off is that this is not a calm coastal or low-density suburb. Beach access is none, the environment is urban and built-up, and buyers looking for a quieter or greener lifestyle may feel the pace and density more strongly here.

Is Redfern NSW 2016 well connected for commuting?

Redfern NSW 2016 is very well connected for commuting. The suburb has train access, many bus services, and Redfern Station connects to multiple major rail lines including T1, T2, T3, T4, T8 and T9. Public transport access to the Sydney CBD is especially strong, with an average commute of about 5 minutes, while driving is also relatively quick at around 10 minutes. Metro is not in the suburb itself, but Central’s M1 access is nearby, which adds to the broader transport picture without being the main current drawcard. That makes Redfern a strong choice for buyers who prioritise public transport, reduced car dependence and fast city access. The trade-off is that the suburb does not offer every transport mode, with no ferry and no light rail service in the suburb itself. For most commuters that will not matter much, but buyers who specifically want a wider range of transport options may see the network as strong rather than perfect.

Who does Redfern NSW 2016 suit best?

Redfern NSW 2016 suits professionals, city-focused owner-occupiers and buyers who want an inner-city lifestyle more than a traditional suburban setup. The resident profile helps explain why. Professionals are the largest occupation group at 42.5%, managers add another 15.6%, and 58.1% of residents are in manager or professional roles overall. Median weekly personal income is $991 and median family income is $2,592, while the median age is 35, which points to a relatively young, working-age population. Housing also leans heavily toward apartment living, with 76% apartments and effectively no separate-house share. In practical terms, Redfern is a good fit for buyers who value access, walkability and being close to major employment areas. It may also suit investors or buyers comfortable in a more mixed, active rental market, with 61.7% of homes rented. It is likely to suit large families, upsizers chasing land, or buyers wanting a classic detached-house suburb less well, because the housing mix and density pull in a different direction.

What are the pros and cons of living in Redfern NSW 2016?

The main trade-off in Redfern NSW 2016 is that you get outstanding inner-city convenience, but you give up some space, calm and traditional suburban feel. On the plus side, Redfern performs strongly where many buyers care most in city-fringe living: walkability is 5 out of 5, retail is 4 out of 5, culture is 4 out of 5, trains are in the suburb, buses are plentiful, and the CBD commute is exceptionally short at around 5 minutes by public transport. For buyers who want daily convenience and less reliance on a car, those are serious advantages. The compromise is that Redfern is urban and built-up, with apartments making up 76% of homes and a rental share of 61.7%, so it feels denser and more transient than tightly held house-dominant suburbs. Safety is also rated 1 out of 5, which some buyers will weigh carefully. That will matter most to families with young children or buyers seeking a quieter environment, but for professionals and lifestyle-driven purchasers, Redfern can still be a very good fit.

What are property prices like in Redfern NSW 2016?

Property prices in Redfern NSW 2016 are expensive by normal Sydney buyer expectations, though there is a clear gap between apartments and houses. In the past six months, the median apartment sale price was about $915,000 from 52 sales, while the median house sale price was about $2.17 million from 28 sales. That tells buyers straight away that Redfern has a meaningful apartment entry point for an inner-city suburb, but detached houses sit in a much higher bracket and are far less accessible for most family budgets. In practical terms, buying property in Redfern often means choosing between convenience and space. Apartments offer a more reachable way into the suburb and may appeal to professionals or smaller households who want location first. Houses are much scarcer and substantially more expensive, reflecting the value of land so close to the CBD. The trade-off is simple: buyers pay for position and connectivity here, and the more traditional family-style housing becomes much more budget-intensive.