Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753 property reports

Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753

Suburb

Suburb summary

Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753 is a rural residential suburb in Sydney’s Outer West, covering 7.6659 sq km. Popular for acreage lifestyle and house buyers, it has a population of 42, median age 35, and low density of 5.48 people per sq km. Housing is entirely separate houses, with no apartments recorded. The median weekly personal income is $725 and family income is $1,625. Environmental features include river or creek adjacency. Transport is limited: nearby train access, limited bus service, no ferry, metro or light rail, with average CBD commute times of 205 minutes by public transport and 70 minutes by car. Recent house median sale price was $1.725M.

Pocket Price Distribution

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Suburb median

Derived from sales

House sales

1

In past 12 months

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Pocket Price Map

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Apartment projects

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PROJECTS MAP

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Demographic info

Median age

34 years

Renters

30%

Top 3 occupations

Managers50%
Professionals10%
Technicians and Trades Workers10%

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Living in Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753 a good suburb for families?

Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753 looks like a mixed option for families rather than a clear-cut family-friendly suburb. The housing stock is overwhelmingly separate houses, which is a plus for buyers wanting space, privacy and room for kids, and the average household size of 3 also points to family-style living. Safety sits at 2 out of 5, though, so I would not describe Richmond Lowlands as one of Sydney’s stronger suburbs for families on schools and safety alone. The school ratings in the available data are unusually high, which suggests education may appeal to some buyers, but the local child share is not especially broad, with 8.9% aged 0 to 4 and no measurable 5 to 14 cohort in the snapshot. In practical terms, Richmond Lowlands may suit buyers who prioritise land, a house-based lifestyle and a quieter outer setting. The trade-off is that it does not read as a classic easy family suburb with strong convenience and an obviously settled kids-and-schools rhythm.

What is it like to live in Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753?

Living in Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753 feels rural-residential, quiet in character and quite removed from Sydney’s busier suburban pace. The suburb sits in the Outer West and is described as river or creek adjacent, which gives it a more natural, open setting than built-up urban areas. That can appeal to buyers wanting breathing room, less density and a house-focused environment rather than apartment living. At the same time, the lifestyle is not especially convenience-led. Walkability is 1 out of 5, retail is 1 out of 5 and culture is 2 out of 5, so day-to-day life is likely to depend more on driving and planning ahead than on strolling to shops, cafés or services. That is really the core Richmond Lowlands trade-off. You are buying space, separation and a more country-style feel within Sydney’s fringe, but giving up the ease and energy that many buyers associate with more established, walkable suburban centres.

Is Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753 well connected for commuting?

Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753 is less convenient for commuting than many Sydney suburbs, although it is not completely disconnected. Train access is nearby rather than in the suburb itself, with the closest rail link tied to the T1 Richmond line, and bus services are limited. There is no metro, no light rail and no ferry connection in the current transport picture. The average trip to the Sydney CBD is about 110 minutes by public transport and around 70 minutes by car, so this is not a suburb I would place in the strongly commuter-friendly category, especially for daily city travel. For buyers who mainly work locally, have flexible work arrangements, or do not need to be in the CBD often, that may be manageable. The trade-off is clear though: Richmond Lowlands offers a more spacious Outer West setting, but commuting requires more time and more reliance on driving or a mix of car and train than in better-connected middle-ring suburbs.

Who does Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753 suit best?

Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753 suits best buyers who want a house-based lifestyle, more space around them and a less urban setting. The suburb is entirely separate houses in the available housing mix, with effectively no apartment market, so it naturally appeals more to house buyers than to people seeking low-maintenance unit living. The resident profile also points to a fairly established, working household base. Managers are the largest occupation group at 45.5%, managers and professionals together make up 59.1%, median personal income is $725 weekly, median family income is $1,625, and the median age is 35. Rental share is 37.5%, which suggests the area is not completely owner-dominated, but still reads as more house-led than transient. In buyer terms, Richmond Lowlands may suit upgraders, buyers wanting room for vehicles or outdoor space, and households comfortable with a more self-contained lifestyle. It may suit apartment buyers, heavy CBD commuters and walk-to-everything buyers less well, because that is not what the suburb appears to offer.

What are the pros and cons of living in Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753?

The main trade-off in Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753 is simple: you get space and a rural-residential feel, but you give up convenience and faster city access. On the plus side, Richmond Lowlands is a pure house suburb with a natural river-or-creek-adjacent setting and a distinctly less dense character than many Sydney locations. That will appeal to buyers who value breathing room, privacy and a more relaxed property style. It is also likely to feel very different from apartment-heavy or retail-driven suburbs, which some buyers actively want. The compromise is that everyday convenience looks limited. Walkability is 1 out of 5, retail is 1 out of 5, bus service is limited, and CBD commuting times are long. Safety at 2 out of 5 also means buyers should keep their expectations balanced rather than assuming a textbook peaceful family enclave. Richmond Lowlands can still be a very good fit for the right buyer, especially someone choosing land and lifestyle over convenience.

What are property prices like in Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753?

Property prices in Richmond Lowlands NSW 2753 look expensive in practical Sydney buyer terms, although the recent sales evidence is very thin. In the last six months, the available suburb history shows one recorded house sale, with a median price of $1.725 million. Because that result comes from a single sale, it is best read as an indication rather than a broad market benchmark. Even so, it suggests that buying property in Richmond Lowlands is not really an entry-level play, despite the suburb’s outer location and limited convenience profile. For buyers, that pricing point usually means you are paying for house land and a more spacious setting rather than for walkability, dense retail amenity or fast CBD transport. There is no recent apartment pricing in the supplied data, which also fits the suburb’s house-dominated character. The trade-off is straightforward: Richmond Lowlands may offer a different lifestyle proposition from inner Sydney, but buyers still need a solid budget to secure a house there.