
Seaforth NSW 2092
Suburb summary
Seaforth, NSW 2092 is a Northern Beaches suburb known for low-density residential living and harbour or waterfront surroundings. Popular searches like Seaforth NSW property market, Seaforth house prices and living in Seaforth reflect its family-oriented profile: population 7,139, median age 40, average household size 3.2, and 91% separate houses versus 5% apartments. Median family income is $3,672 weekly, with 58.72% managers and professionals. Over the past 6 months, median sold prices were $3.65M for houses and $2.40M for apartments. Seaforth offers many bus services, about 45 minutes to the Sydney CBD by public transport and 30 minutes by car.
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
63
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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212 popular houses in Seaforth NSW 2092
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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24 popular apartments in Seaforth NSW 2092
Demographic info
Median age
42 years
Renters
20%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Seaforth NSW 2092: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Seaforth NSW 2092 a good suburb for families?
Seaforth NSW 2092 is a strong suburb for families, especially for buyers wanting a house-based area with a settled residential feel. The biggest family positive is the housing mix: around 91% of homes are separate houses and only about 5% are apartments, which usually means more private outdoor space and a streetscape that suits longer-term family living. The suburb also has a relatively large share of school-aged children, with about 19.2% aged 5 to 14, and the average household size is 3.2 people, which supports the idea that Seaforth attracts established family households rather than mainly singles or transient renters. Safety is also solid at 4 out of 5, which helps when buyers are weighing up whether Seaforth is a good suburb for kids. The trade-off is that family appeal here often comes with a higher entry price and a quieter, less amenity-heavy setting, so buyers wanting walkable convenience may need to compromise.
What is it like to live in Seaforth NSW 2092?
Living in Seaforth NSW 2092 feels established, low-density and waterside rather than busy or urban. Seaforth sits in the Northern Beaches and its character reads as clearly residential, with harbour and waterfront environmental features shaping the lifestyle more than dense shopping or nightlife. Tree canopy cover is a healthy 33.15%, which helps give the suburb a greener feel, and nearby beach access adds to the broader coastal appeal, even though Seaforth itself is not beachfront. In everyday terms, this is a suburb that suits buyers who value space, calm streets and a more home-focused rhythm. The trade-off is convenience: walkability, retail and culture all sit at 2 out of 5, so living in Seaforth is less about stepping outside to cafés, shops and transport, and more about enjoying a quieter residential base. For some buyers that is exactly the appeal; for others it may feel a bit car dependent.
Is Seaforth NSW 2092 well connected for commuting?
Seaforth NSW 2092 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s strongest public transport suburbs. The key advantage is bus coverage, which is rated as many, so buyers are not cut off from broader transport options. Average travel time to the Sydney CBD is about 45 minutes by public transport and around 30 minutes by car, which is workable for many professionals, especially compared with more distant family suburbs. That said, Seaforth has no train, no metro and no light rail service in the suburb, and there is no ferry service either, so commuting is more bus-and-road based than rail based. That is the main trade-off buyers should understand. If you want a Northern Beaches address with a house-oriented lifestyle and acceptable city access, Seaforth can work well. If daily train access is a must-have, it will likely feel less convenient than rail-linked suburbs.
Who does Seaforth NSW 2092 suit best?
Seaforth NSW 2092 suits established families, professionals and higher-income buyers who want a house-dominant suburb with a quieter Northern Beaches lifestyle. The local profile points strongly in that direction: about 58.7% of residents are managers and professionals, the top occupations are Professionals at 35.0% and Managers at 23.7%, and median family income sits at $3,672 per week. The housing mix is also very clear, with roughly 91% separate houses, which will appeal more to buyers looking for space than to those targeting dense apartment living. The rental share is relatively modest at about 16.5%, so Seaforth tends to feel more owner-occupier-led and settled than highly transient. The trade-off is that Seaforth may suit first-home buyers and budget-led apartment buyers less well, because the suburb’s identity is tied more to detached housing and a higher-income buyer base than to lower-entry, high-density stock.
What are the pros and cons of living in Seaforth NSW 2092?
The main trade-off in Seaforth NSW 2092 is space and lifestyle versus convenience and transport variety. On the plus side, Seaforth does very well for buyers who want a house-focused suburb with a solid safety profile, a greener setting and a waterside Northern Beaches feel. About 91% of homes are separate houses, tree canopy cover is 33.15%, and safety is 4 out of 5, which supports its appeal for buyers who value privacy, stability and a more relaxed residential environment. Commute times to the CBD are also still manageable by Sydney standards, especially by car. The compromise is that Seaforth is not especially walkable or amenity-rich day to day. Retail, walkability and culture are each 2 out of 5, and there is no train, metro, light rail or ferry in the suburb. Buyers who want vibrant streets and multiple transport modes may feel that trade-off most, while buyers prioritising home life may see it as worthwhile.
What are property prices like in Seaforth NSW 2092?
Property prices in Seaforth NSW 2092 are expensive to premium by Sydney buyer expectations, particularly for houses. Over the past six months, the median house price sits at about $3.65 million from 13 sales, with the middle market roughly spanning from $3.3 million at the 25th percentile to $4.23 million at the 75th percentile. That tells buyers Seaforth house prices are firmly positioned in the upper end of the family-home market rather than the broad middle. Apartments are less common, with only 3 recorded sales, and the median apartment price is about $2.8 million, which still places units here at a high price point. In practical terms, buying property in Seaforth usually means paying up for detached housing, a low-density streetscape and Northern Beaches lifestyle appeal. The trade-off is straightforward: you are paying a premium for space, setting and buyer profile, not for entry-level affordability or abundant lower-cost stock.
