Spring Farm NSW 2570 property reports

Spring Farm NSW 2570

Suburb

Suburb summary

Spring Farm, NSW 2570 is a South West Sydney suburb in the Macarthur region known for family homes and a new residential estate setting. The suburb covers 6.3569 km², has a population of 4,307, median age 30, average household size 2.9, and population density of 677.53 people per km². Housing is entirely separate houses in this dataset, with 22.27% renters. It has river or creek adjacency, 12.35% canopy cover, bus services, and no train, metro, light rail or ferry. In the past 6 months, 62 houses sold, with a median house price of $1.15M.

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

$1.1M

Derived from sales

House sales

159

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

Apartment projects map preview

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Demographic info

Median age

30 years

Renters

30%

Top 3 occupations

Professionals20%
Clerical and Administrative Workers20%
Managers10%

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Living in Spring Farm NSW 2570: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Spring Farm NSW 2570 a good suburb for families?

Spring Farm NSW 2570 is a strong option for families, especially buyers who want a newer house-oriented suburb with solid schooling and a younger resident base. The school ratings are strong at 8 out of 10 for both primary and secondary, safety sits at 4 out of 5, and the age profile is clearly family-leaning, with children aged 0 to 4 making up 13.1% of residents and those aged 5 to 14 at 14.3%. That is a meaningful sign that Spring Farm is not just marketed to families, but actively lived in by them. The average household size of 2.9 also supports that family-household pattern, and the housing mix is overwhelmingly separate houses rather than apartments, which usually suits buyers needing more bedrooms and outdoor space. The trade-off is that Spring Farm feels more outer-suburban than established inner Sydney areas, so families may get space and relative calm, but give up faster CBD access and a more walkable daily lifestyle.

What is it like to live in Spring Farm NSW 2570?

Living in Spring Farm NSW 2570 feels modern, practical, and suburban, with a clear new-estate character rather than an old village atmosphere. The suburb sits in the South West & Macarthur region and is described by its newer residential estate feel, so buyers should expect a planned, contemporary environment rather than a heritage streetscape. Day to day, Spring Farm offers a lifestyle that is more car-based than walk-everywhere, with walkability at 1 out of 5, retail at 3 out of 5, and culture at 2 out of 5. Its creek-adjacent setting adds some natural appeal, but canopy cover is only 12.35%, so it does not read as especially leafy compared with more established garden suburbs. Safety is a stronger point at 4 out of 5, which helps the suburb feel comfortable for many owner-occupiers. The trade-off is simple: Spring Farm is easier to like if you value modern housing and family practicality more than café culture, older charm, or highly convenient urban living.

Is Spring Farm NSW 2570 well connected for commuting?

Spring Farm NSW 2570 is less convenient for commuting than many middle-ring Sydney suburbs, although it is workable for buyers who mainly rely on driving or buses. There is no train, no metro, and no light rail service in the suburb, while bus coverage is available at a stronger level, with many bus services rather than limited coverage. For CBD commuters, the numbers are the key reality check: the average public transport trip to central Sydney is about 115 minutes, and driving is around 50 minutes in typical conditions. That means Spring Farm is not the suburb buyers usually choose for a quick city commute. Instead, it suits households whose work is more local, more flexible, or spread across the broader south-west corridor. The upside is that buyers may get more house value and space than closer-in suburbs. The trade-off is a heavier reliance on cars and a longer trip if regular Sydney CBD access is a major priority.

Who does Spring Farm NSW 2570 suit best?

Spring Farm NSW 2570 suits family buyers, upgraders, and owner-occupiers who want a modern house-focused suburb with a younger demographic and a practical lifestyle. The housing mix is a major clue: 100% of homes are separate houses and 0% are apartments in the available profile, so Spring Farm naturally fits buyers looking for more internal space, more bedrooms, and a backyard-oriented setup. The median age is 30, which points to a relatively young community, and the average household size of 2.9 suggests many couple and family households rather than singles. Professionals are the largest occupation group at 18.7%, followed by clerical and administrative workers at 17.3% and technicians and trades workers at 14.6%, creating a fairly broad mainstream buyer base. Family income is solid at $2,216 per week. The trade-off is that Spring Farm may suit downsizers, apartment buyers, or people wanting a more urban professional lifestyle less well than areas with more density, walkability, and transport choice.

What are the pros and cons of living in Spring Farm NSW 2570?

The main trade-off in Spring Farm NSW 2570 is that buyers get modern family-friendly house living, but they give up some convenience, walkability, and faster CBD transport. What Spring Farm does well is clear: safety is relatively strong at 4 out of 5, schools rate well at 8 out of 10 for both primary and secondary, and the suburb is firmly house-based, which will appeal to buyers chasing space. Its younger age profile and solid family income also suggest an active owner-occupier market with a practical family focus. On the other hand, walkability is low at 1 out of 5, culture is modest at 2 out of 5, and there is no train, metro, ferry, or light rail service, so daily life is more car-dependent. Tree canopy is also modest at 12.35%, which means Spring Farm feels newer and more built-form driven than leafy. For buyers prioritising space, newer housing, and schools, that compromise may be worth it.

What are property prices like in Spring Farm NSW 2570?

Property prices in Spring Farm NSW 2570 look mid-range to expensive in practical Sydney family-home terms, but still more accessible than many premium house markets closer to the city. In the last six months, the available sales data shows 54 house sales with a median price of $1,171,125, an average price of about $1,122,565, and a middle range from roughly $1,050,000 at the 25th percentile to $1,215,000 at the 75th percentile. That tells buyers that house prices in Spring Farm have moved firmly into seven-figure territory, so this is no longer an entry-level detached-house suburb for many households. At the same time, compared with more established inner and north-shore family suburbs, Spring Farm can still represent better value for buyers prioritising newer homes and land. The trade-off is that you are paying for family functionality and modern housing stock, while accepting a longer commute and a less walkable, less established suburb feel.