Ropes Crossing NSW 2760 property reports

Ropes Crossing NSW 2760

Suburb

Suburb summary

Ropes Crossing, NSW 2760 is a master-planned suburb in Western Sydney known for modern family housing and urban estate living. The population is 6,171, median age is 30, average household size is 3.2, and 99% of dwellings are separate houses. Median weekly personal income is $852 and median family income is $2,055. Over the past 6 months, median sold prices were $1.101M for houses and $618,000 for apartments. Ropes Crossing property market searches often focus on house prices, family homes, schools, and lifestyle. Public transport to the Sydney CBD averages 70 minutes, with many bus services and nearby train access.

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

$1M

Derived from sales

House sales

72

In past 12 months

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Pocket Price Map

Pocket price distribution map preview

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Apartment projects

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PROJECTS MAP

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Demographic info

Median age

31 years

Renters

30%

Top 3 occupations

Professionals20%
Clerical and Administrative Workers20%
Managers10%

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Living in Ropes Crossing NSW 2760: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Ropes Crossing NSW 2760 a good suburb for families?

Ropes Crossing NSW 2760 is a solid suburb for families, especially for buyers who want a modern house-focused area with strong school appeal. The education ratings are notably high at 6 out of 5 for both primary and secondary schooling in the available data, and the suburb has a very family-shaped age profile, with 13.6% of residents aged 0 to 4 and 15.7% aged 5 to 14. Household size is also relatively large at 3.2 people, which usually points to established family living rather than a mainly singles or downsizer market. Housing mix matters too: around 99% of homes are separate houses, so Ropes Crossing is much more house-oriented than many Sydney suburbs. The trade-off is that family buyers should not confuse this with a highly convenient or highly polished inner-city family-friendly suburb. Safety is rated 1 out of 5, and daily convenience is more limited than in more mature centres. So yes, Ropes Crossing is good for kids and growing households, but it will suit buyers who prioritise space, schools and newer housing over walk-everywhere convenience.

What is it like to live in Ropes Crossing NSW 2760?

Living in Ropes Crossing NSW 2760 feels practical, modern and suburban rather than bustling or village-like. It is a master-planned estate in Western Sydney, and that usually translates into a more uniform, contemporary streetscape with a clearly residential feel. With canopy cover at 52.01%, Ropes Crossing has a greener look than many built-up suburbs, which softens the urban setting and can make daily life feel more pleasant for families. That said, the suburb is still classified as urban and built-up, not a bushland or coastal lifestyle area. Walkability, retail and culture all sit at 2 out of 5, so the Ropes Crossing lifestyle is not really about café strips, destination shopping or lots happening on foot. For the right buyer, that can be perfectly fine. If you want a quieter house-based suburb with a straightforward family rhythm, Ropes Crossing can feel easy to live in. The compromise is that buyers wanting a more vibrant, highly convenient or prestige-led suburb may find it a bit limited day to day.

Is Ropes Crossing NSW 2760 well connected for commuting?

Ropes Crossing NSW 2760 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s most seamless public transport suburbs. The suburb does not have its own train or metro station, although train access is available nearby via the T1 and T5 lines at St Marys, and bus coverage is rated as many. That gives commuters usable transport options rather than leaving them fully car-dependent. In practical terms, the average commute to the Sydney CBD is about 70 minutes by public transport and around 50 minutes by car, so getting into the city is possible but not especially quick. For buyers working locally, in Western Sydney, or in hybrid roles, that transport picture may be perfectly acceptable. For daily CBD commuters, though, the trade-off is clear: you are generally giving up some speed and simplicity compared with suburbs that have direct rail access or shorter travel times. Ropes Crossing suits buyers who can live with a longer commute in exchange for a more house-focused suburban environment.

Who does Ropes Crossing NSW 2760 suit best?

Ropes Crossing NSW 2760 suits best families, upgrader buyers and house-focused households who want space in a modern suburban setting. The housing mix is the clearest clue: about 99% of dwellings are separate houses and apartments are effectively absent, so the suburb is geared far more toward buyers wanting a freestanding home than those looking for unit living. The median age is 30, average household size is 3.2, and family income is $2,055 per week, all of which point to a younger, working household base. Professionals are the largest occupation group at 20.1%, followed by clerical and administrative workers at 17.5%, so Ropes Crossing appears to attract employed households looking for practical livability rather than prestige positioning. It may suit investors too, with renting at 23.3%, but it feels more owner-occupier oriented than heavily transient. Buyers it may suit less well include downsizers, apartment seekers, and people who want a lively walkable hub. Ropes Crossing is more about house living, routine and family space than urban variety.

What are the pros and cons of living in Ropes Crossing NSW 2760?

The main trade-off in Ropes Crossing NSW 2760 is that you get a strongly house-based family environment, but you give up some convenience, vibrancy and commuting ease. On the plus side, Ropes Crossing has a very clear residential identity: around 99% separate houses, a relatively large household size, strong school appeal, many bus services, and over 52% canopy cover, which helps the suburb feel greener than a typical built-up estate. For buyers wanting a practical family suburb rather than apartment density, that is a genuine strength. The compromise is that some lifestyle ratings are modest. Walkability, retail and culture are each 2 out of 5, safety is 1 out of 5, and there is no train, metro, light rail or ferry service directly in the suburb. Public transport to the CBD averages 70 minutes, which is workable but not especially convenient. For buyers who mostly want a freestanding home, newer suburban feel and family-oriented housing stock, Ropes Crossing may still be a very good fit. Those who care most about buzz, short commutes or walkable amenity will notice the trade-offs more.

What are property prices like in Ropes Crossing NSW 2760?

Property prices in Ropes Crossing NSW 2760 look mid-range by Sydney house standards, especially for buyers targeting a freestanding family home. In the last six months, the suburb recorded 23 house sales, with a median house price of $1,101,000, an average of about $1,106,196, and most sales sitting between roughly $1,032,000 and $1,175,000. The upper end reached $1,300,000, while the lower end was $935,000. For Sydney buyers, that suggests Ropes Crossing is not bargain-basement territory, but it can still represent a more accessible entry point for a house than many established middle-ring family suburbs. What that means in practical terms is that buying property in Ropes Crossing often involves paying for a full house-based lifestyle rather than premium location or elite transport access. The trade-off is fairly straightforward: you may get better house value and family space than in tighter inner or lower north shore markets, but you are accepting a longer CBD commute and a more limited local amenity profile in return.