
Roseville Chase NSW 2069
Suburb summary
Roseville Chase, NSW 2069 is an Upper North Shore suburb with a harbour bushland residential setting and river or creek adjacency. It had 1,616 residents, 100% separate houses, no apartments, 44.19% canopy cover, and low rental stock at 8.13%. Median weekly family income was $3,553, with professionals making up 36.62% of occupations. Safety, primary schools, and secondary schools are all rated 4–5, making Roseville Chase attractive for families seeking quality schools. Public transport to Sydney CBD averages 45 minutes, or 25 minutes by car. In the past 6 months, 4 house sales recorded a median price of $3.301 million.
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
$3.7M
Derived from sales
House sales
21
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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46 popular houses in Roseville Chase NSW 2069
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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Demographic info
Median age
45 years
Renters
10%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Roseville Chase NSW 2069: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is ROSEVILLE CHASE NSW 2069 a good suburb for families?
ROSEVILLE CHASE NSW 2069 is a strong suburb for families, especially buyers looking for space, schooling strength and a quieter residential setting. The school ratings are excellent, with both primary and secondary education sitting at 5 out of 5, and safety is also solid at 4 out of 5, which gives buyers confidence around day-to-day liveability. The housing mix is a major plus for family buyers too, with separate houses making up 100% of local homes and an average household size of 3.1, which points to a suburb that suits established family living rather than compact apartment lifestyles. Children are clearly part of the local mix, with around 4.5% aged 0 to 4 and 18.1% aged 5 to 14. The trade-off is that ROSEVILLE CHASE is not the most convenient or urban family-friendly suburb if you want easy walkability, shops and public transport right at your door.
What is it like to live in ROSEVILLE CHASE NSW 2069?
Living in ROSEVILLE CHASE NSW 2069 feels calm, established and strongly residential, with a bushland-harbour edge rather than a busy village atmosphere. The suburb sits in the Upper North Shore & Hornsby region and has a character best described as harbour bushland residential, which fits with its creekside natural setting and high canopy cover of 44.19%. In practical terms, that means buyers often get a greener, softer streetscape than in more built-up parts of Sydney. Safety is a healthy 4 out of 5, which helps support a settled lifestyle feel. At the same time, walkability is only 3 out of 5, while retail and culture are both 2 out of 5, so daily life in ROSEVILLE CHASE is more home-centred than café-centred. That suits buyers wanting peace, privacy and nature, but less so those chasing a lively, walk-everywhere suburb lifestyle.
Is ROSEVILLE CHASE NSW 2069 well connected for commuting?
ROSEVILLE CHASE NSW 2069 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s most transport-rich suburbs. The suburb does not have its own train, metro or light rail service, and ferry access is not available either, so commuters are more dependent on buses and driving than buyers in rail-served suburbs. Bus coverage is limited rather than extensive, which is the main qualification here. That said, the commute picture is not poor by Sydney standards: the average drive to the CBD is about 25 minutes, and public transport averages around 45 minutes. For many North Shore buyers, that keeps ROSEVILLE CHASE viable for city-based work, especially if driving is part of the routine. The trade-off is flexibility. If you want multiple public transport options or an easy station-based commute, other suburbs may feel more convenient, while ROSEVILLE CHASE appeals more to buyers who prioritise lifestyle and house quality first.
Who does ROSEVILLE CHASE NSW 2069 suit best?
ROSEVILLE CHASE NSW 2069 suits established family buyers and higher-income professional households best, especially those wanting a full-house suburb with a quieter North Shore feel. The housing profile is very clear: 100% separate houses and no apartment market, so this is a suburb aimed at buyers who want land, privacy and a more traditional family home setup. The resident profile supports that positioning. Managers and professionals make up 59.22% of residents, with Professionals alone at 36.62% and Managers at 22.6%, while median weekly family income is $3,553 and median age is 42. That points to a mature, well-established owner-occupier style market rather than a transient one, especially with renting at just 8.13%. The trade-off is that ROSEVILLE CHASE may suit first-home buyers, apartment buyers and highly budget-sensitive households less well. It is better matched to buyers who value space, schooling and stability over density and convenience.
What are the pros and cons of living in ROSEVILLE CHASE NSW 2069?
The main trade-off in ROSEVILLE CHASE NSW 2069 is that you gain space, greenery and a strong family setting, but give up some everyday convenience and transport choice. On the plus side, the suburb offers a very house-focused environment, strong safety at 4 out of 5, excellent school ratings, low rental turnover and a genuinely green setting with 44.19% canopy cover and a creek-adjacent natural backdrop. For many buyers, that creates a more private and settled version of North Shore living. On the other hand, walkability is only moderate at 3 out of 5, retail and culture are both 2 out of 5, buses are limited, and there is no train, metro, light rail or ferry in the suburb itself. So the disadvantages of living in ROSEVILLE CHASE mostly come down to convenience rather than quality. Buyers who want calm residential living may see that as a fair exchange, while car-light households may care more.
What are property prices like in ROSEVILLE CHASE NSW 2069?
Property prices in ROSEVILLE CHASE NSW 2069 are expensive by normal Sydney buyer expectations, reflecting its tightly held North Shore house market rather than an entry-level suburb. In the past six months, the recorded house median was about $3.375 million, with sales ranging from $3.0 million to $3.85 million. There were only three house sales in that period, which suggests a small and relatively tightly supplied market, so buyers should treat pricing as indicative but still meaningful. There was no apartment result in the recent sales data, which fits the suburb’s all-house profile. In practical terms, buying property in ROSEVILLE CHASE usually means budgeting for a premium family-home bracket rather than looking for a cheaper stepping-stone purchase. The trade-off is straightforward: buyers are paying up for large-home positioning, strong school appeal, greenery and a stable residential feel, but affordability and stock depth are more limited than in broader Sydney markets.
