Sylvania NSW 2224 property reports

Sylvania NSW 2224

Suburb

Suburb summary

Sylvania, NSW 2224 is a bayside residential suburb in the Sutherland Shire, popular for family living, waterfront access and Sydney real estate buyers seeking houses and apartments. Sylvania has a population of 10,479, median age 44, average household size 2.7, and 74% separate houses versus 17% apartments. Over the past 6 months, median sold prices were $1.80M for houses and $1.14M for apartments. The suburb offers many bus services, a train connection nearby, a 50-minute CBD public transport commute, 35-minute drive, primary school rating 5, secondary rating 4, safety 4, and river or creek-adjacent surroundings.

Pocket Price Distribution

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Suburb median

$2M

Derived from sales

House sales

80

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

46 years

Renters

20%

Top 3 occupations

Managers20%
Professionals20%
Clerical and Administrative Workers20%

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Living in Sylvania NSW 2224: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Sylvania NSW 2224 a good suburb for families?

Sylvania NSW 2224 is a solid suburb for families, especially buyers who want a house-focused area with a more settled feel. The suburb has a strong separate-house share at 74%, a relatively low apartment share at 17%, and an average household size of 2.7, which all point to a neighbourhood that works well for family living rather than a high-density urban setup. The child age mix is also meaningful, with 6.3% of residents aged 0 to 4 and 12.1% aged 5 to 14, suggesting Sylvania is genuinely used by households with school-age children. Safety reads well at 4 out of 5, which is reassuring for buyers asking whether Sylvania is a good suburb for families or good for kids. The trade-off is schooling. Primary and secondary education ratings sit at 10 out of 5 and 8 out of 5 respectively in the supplied data, which suggests the school picture needs careful checking at a household level rather than assuming a standout academic catchment. For families wanting space, calmer streets and a practical Sutherland Shire base, Sylvania remains a strong contender.

What is it like to live in Sylvania NSW 2224?

Living in Sylvania NSW 2224 feels established, practical and waterside without being flashy. It sits in the Sutherland Shire and has a bayside residential character, with river and creek surroundings shaping the suburb’s everyday feel more than a dense urban atmosphere. That gives Sylvania a quieter residential identity than many busier Sydney centres, while still feeling connected to daily essentials. Retail, walkability and culture each sit at 3 out of 5, which points to a lifestyle that is functional rather than highly activated. In plain terms, living in Sylvania is likely to suit buyers who like a suburban rhythm and some natural water adjacency, without needing an inner-city café scene at their doorstep. The compromise is that Sylvania is not especially leafy or ultra-walkable by Sydney standards, with canopy cover at 19.59%. Beach access is also listed as none, so the lifestyle is more creek-and-river suburban than coastal. For buyers who want a steady family-oriented suburb with a balanced day-to-day feel, that can still be a very comfortable fit.

Is Sylvania NSW 2224 well connected for commuting?

Sylvania NSW 2224 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s easiest door-to-door public transport suburbs. The transport picture is mixed in a practical way: train access is nearby rather than within the suburb itself, there is no metro or light rail service, and bus coverage is strong with many services available. Average commuting times are workable rather than standout, at around 50 minutes to the Sydney CBD by public transport and 35 minutes by car. That makes Sylvania a viable choice for commuters who are comfortable using buses, driving, or connecting into the wider rail network rather than relying on a station in the suburb itself. The trade-off is convenience compared with train-line suburbs where rail is right on the doorstep. If you commute daily into the city, that extra transfer or bus leg may matter. Still, for buyers working across the south, the St George area or within the Shire, Sylvania can feel more connected than the raw CBD figure alone suggests.

Who does Sylvania NSW 2224 suit best?

Sylvania NSW 2224 suits best established families, upgraders and owner-occupiers who want a house-based suburb with a stable middle-ring feel. The housing mix is the clearest clue: 74% of homes are separate houses and only 17% are apartments, so Sylvania naturally appeals to buyers looking for more internal space, a yard, or a less dense living environment. The resident profile also leans mature and settled, with a median age of 44 and only 20.3% renters, which suggests a fairly anchored community rather than a highly transient one. Occupation data is led by professionals at 22.8%, then clerical and administrative workers at 17.2%, and managers at 16.4%, while 39.2% of residents are managers and professionals overall. That profile makes Sylvania especially relevant for households seeking stability, lifestyle balance and a family-home setting. It may suit younger buyers wanting an apartment-first, nightlife-driven or highly urban walk-everywhere suburb less well. For those buyers, Sylvania can feel a little too suburban, but for practical long-term living it has clear appeal.

What are the pros and cons of living in Sylvania NSW 2224?

The main trade-off in Sylvania NSW 2224 is that you get a stable, house-oriented waterside suburb, but not the same walk-everywhere convenience or rail access as some tighter inner-city locations. On the plus side, Sylvania offers a strong family-home base with 74% separate houses, relatively low rental turnover at 20.3%, safety at 4 out of 5, and a residential setting shaped by nearby river and creek areas. That combination will appeal to buyers who prioritise space, a settled neighbourhood feel and a more grounded Sutherland Shire lifestyle. Commuting is also manageable, with many bus services and nearby train access rather than total transport isolation. The downside is that some of the everyday convenience is only moderate. Walkability, retail and culture all sit at 3 out of 5, there is no metro, no light rail and no ferry, and public transport to the CBD averages around 50 minutes. Buyers who want doorstep rail, a denser café scene or a stronger urban buzz may feel the compromise more sharply. For the right buyer, though, that same trade-off is exactly what makes Sylvania appealing.

What are property prices like in Sylvania NSW 2224?

Property prices in Sylvania NSW 2224 are expensive by normal Sydney buyer expectations, though not at the very top end of the market. Over the past six months, the median house price in Sylvania was about $1.85 million across 23 sales, while the median apartment price was about $1.25 million across 22 sales. That pricing gap tells buyers something useful straight away: houses in Sylvania demand a materially higher budget, while apartments provide a lower entry point for buyers wanting the suburb without stretching into full house territory. House sale prices also show a wide spread, from $975,000 to $5.71 million, which suggests stock quality, land position and home type can make a big difference. In practical terms, buying property in Sylvania means budget discipline matters. Houses will likely suit upgraders and established family buyers more than first-home purchasers, while apartments may appeal to downsizers or buyers prioritising location over land. The trade-off is simple: you are paying for a settled house-heavy suburb in the Shire, but you still need to accept that convenience and transport are more moderate than premium inner-Sydney locations.