Ryde NSW 2112 property reports

Ryde NSW 2112

Suburb

Suburb summary

Ryde, NSW 2112 is a Lower North Shore and Ryde Corridor suburb with a strong Sydney family appeal, diverse community, and solid apartment market. Ryde population is 26,499, median age 36, with median weekly family income of $2,040. Housing in Ryde includes 4,249 houses and 4,279 apartments, with 151 apartment sales in the past 6 months at a median price of $691,000, and 47 house sales at a median of $2.615M. Ryde offers strong schools ratings, good walkability, many buses, ferry access, 25-minute driving commute to Sydney CBD, and river-adjacent surroundings, making Ryde attractive for buyers, investors, and families.

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

$2.6M

Derived from sales

House sales

173

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

36 years

Renters

50%

Top 3 occupations

Professionals30%
Clerical and Administrative Workers20%
Managers10%

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Living in Ryde NSW 2112: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Ryde NSW 2112 a good suburb for families?

Ryde NSW 2112 is a solid suburb for families, especially buyers who put school quality high on the list. The strongest data point here is education: both primary and secondary schooling score 10 out of 5 in the available ratings, which makes Ryde stand out for school-focused buyers. Children are also a visible part of the suburb profile, with around 6.6% of residents aged 0 to 4 and 10.2% aged 5 to 14, while the average household size of 2.6 suggests a genuine mix of couples and family households rather than a purely transient market. That said, Ryde is not a classic low-density family suburb. Separate houses and apartments each sit at 39% of the housing mix, and safety is a middle-of-the-road 3 out of 5 rather than especially high. So while Ryde is a good suburb for families and good for kids in schooling terms, buyers seeking a quieter, more house-dominant setting may want to weigh that trade-off carefully.

What is it like to live in Ryde NSW 2112?

Living in Ryde NSW 2112 feels practical, established and fairly convenient, with more of a suburban commercial centre atmosphere than a quiet village feel. Ryde sits in the Lower North Shore and Ryde Corridor and combines an urban, built-up character with some river or creek adjacency, so the lifestyle is not all concrete, but it is also not especially leafy. Tree canopy cover is 22.04%, which supports that balanced reading. Walkability and retail both rate 4 out of 5, so everyday errands, local shopping and basic convenience are genuine strengths, while culture sits at 3 out of 5 and safety is also 3 out of 5, pointing to a lifestyle that is functional and active rather than especially charming or tranquil. For many buyers, Ryde lifestyle means access and practicality first. The trade-off is that if you want a highly peaceful, green or beach-oriented suburb, Ryde may feel more urban and workaday than aspirational.

Is Ryde NSW 2112 well connected for commuting?

Ryde NSW 2112 is reasonably well connected for commuting, especially for buyers who are comfortable using buses and ferries rather than relying on a local train station. The suburb does not currently have train, metro or light rail service within the suburb itself, but it does have many bus services and ferry access, which helps support a workable public transport commute. The average trip to the Sydney CBD is about 40 minutes by public transport and 25 minutes by car, which is quite usable for many professionals, particularly those travelling outside the heaviest peak conditions. The trade-off is clear: Ryde is not one of Sydney’s most rail-driven commuter suburbs. If direct train access is a must-have, the transport picture may feel a bit limited compared with suburbs built around a station. Still, for buyers who value road access, bus networks and the flexibility of ferry options, Ryde remains a practical choice for commuting without being the very easiest commute in Sydney.

Who does Ryde NSW 2112 suit best?

Ryde NSW 2112 suits buyers who want a practical middle-ground suburb: professionals, upsizers and school-focused families who value convenience more than prestige atmosphere. The local profile points strongly in that direction. Professionals are the largest occupation group at 30.1%, followed by clerical and administrative workers at 15.6% and managers at 14.1%, while 44.2% of residents are managers or professionals overall. Median weekly personal income is $756 and median family income is $2,040, which suggests a working, established suburb rather than an ultra-luxury enclave. With a median age of 36, Ryde also reads as broadly balanced across life stages. Housing choice is mixed rather than one-dimensional. Separate houses and apartments each account for 39% of stock, and around 41.2% of homes are rented, which creates a more active and mixed market. That makes Ryde good for buyers wanting flexibility, but less suited to those chasing a tightly held, prestige-only or purely large-lot family suburb.

What are the pros and cons of living in Ryde NSW 2112?

The main trade-off in Ryde NSW 2112 is that you get strong day-to-day convenience and buyer practicality, but you give up some of the calm, green, purely residential feel found in quieter suburbs. On the plus side, Ryde performs well for walkability and retail at 4 out of 5, has many bus services, ferry access, and a manageable CBD commute of around 40 minutes by public transport or 25 minutes by car. Its river or creek adjacency adds some environmental appeal, and the suburb’s mixed housing profile gives buyers more choice than many tightly held areas. The compromise is that Ryde feels more urban and commercially centred than village-like. Safety sits at 3 out of 5, culture is 3 out of 5, and canopy cover at 22.04% suggests a suburb that is not especially leafy. With apartments and houses both at 39% and a rental share above 41%, the area can feel more mixed and active. For the right buyer, that is a strength rather than a weakness.

What are property prices like in Ryde NSW 2112?

Property prices in Ryde NSW 2112 are mid-range to expensive by Sydney standards, depending on whether you are buying an apartment or a house. Recent sales history shows a median apartment price of about $696,000 from 142 sales, while houses had a much higher median of about $2.53 million from 42 sales. That creates a very clear two-speed market. For apartment buyers, Ryde can offer a more accessible entry point into a well-known Sydney suburb with solid convenience and commuting practicality. For house buyers, though, the budget step-up is significant and puts pressure on families wanting land and long-term space. That pricing pattern tells buyers a lot about Ryde. Apartments look like the more approachable path for first-home buyers, downsizers or investors focused on location and convenience, while houses are firmly in the expensive bracket. The trade-off is straightforward: you can buy into Ryde at a lower level via units, but a freestanding house requires a much larger budget.