
Tempe NSW 2044
Suburb summary
Tempe NSW 2044 is an Inner West Sydney suburb known for transport convenience, river and creek adjacency, and a residential feel. It covers 1.8539 sq km, has a population of 3,556, median age 38, and average household size 2.7. Housing is dominated by houses (806, 86%), with apartments making up 7%. Tempe has train access on the T8 line, many bus services, and average CBD travel times of 25 minutes by public transport and 20 minutes by car. Recent sales show 13 houses with a median price of $1.86M and 2 apartments with a median price of $400,000.
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
$1.7M
Derived from sales
House sales
33
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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84 popular houses in Tempe NSW 2044
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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14 popular apartments in Tempe NSW 2044
Demographic info
Median age
39 years
Renters
30%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Tempe NSW 2044: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Tempe NSW 2044 a good suburb for families?
Tempe NSW 2044 is a mixed option for families rather than a standout family-friendly suburb. On the positive side, it has a very high share of separate houses at 86%, which usually suits buyers who want more space, and the average household size of 2.7 suggests a suburb that can accommodate family living. Children are certainly part of the local mix too, with 6.5% aged 0 to 4 and 12.3% aged 5 to 14. That said, the biggest caution is safety, which sits at 1 out of 5, so buyers looking for a calm, highly secure-feeling suburb for kids should weigh that carefully. School ratings are not a strength either, with both primary and secondary at 10 out of 5 not being a meaningful advantage in the data provided. Tempe may still work for families who prioritise house stock and inner-city access, but it is a more practical than classic family-focused choice.
What is it like to live in Tempe NSW 2044?
Living in Tempe NSW 2044 feels practical, urban, and transport-oriented rather than polished or village-like. Tempe sits in the Inner West & Inner West Fringe and reads as a transport-adjacent residential suburb, so the day-to-day lifestyle is likely to appeal to buyers who want function and access over atmosphere. Walkability is a solid 4 out of 5, which supports easier local movement, but retail and culture are both only 2 out of 5, so it is not the kind of suburb where everything revolves around a strong high street or café scene. The environmental setting has some river and creek adjacency, but canopy cover is only 12.02%, so Tempe does not come across as especially leafy. Safety is the main trade-off at 1 out of 5. In buyer terms, Tempe can suit people who value convenience and location, but it is less compelling for those chasing a quiet, green, lifestyle-led Inner West feel.
Is Tempe NSW 2044 well connected for commuting?
Tempe NSW 2044 is well connected for commuting, especially for buyers who value train access and reasonable trip times into the city. The suburb has a train station on the T8 line, many bus services, and an average public transport commute to the Sydney CBD of about 25 minutes, with driving around 20 minutes. For an Inner West location, that is a very workable setup and makes Tempe a sensible option for regular commuters. It does not currently have metro or light rail service, and there is no ferry, so the transport mix is strong but not as broad as in some better-serviced inner-city pockets. Still, for buyers focused on public transport, Tempe performs well because the essentials are already in place rather than being future promises. The main trade-off is that the suburb’s connectivity is a bigger selling point than its lifestyle depth, so commuters may like it more than buyers seeking a more rounded live-work-play feel.
Who does Tempe NSW 2044 suit best?
Tempe NSW 2044 suits best buyers who want an Inner West house-based suburb with practical access to the city, especially professionals and households that prioritise transport over prestige. The local profile supports that: professionals make up 27.66% of workers, managers 14.69%, and clerical and administrative workers 15.66%, while managers and professionals together account for 42.36%. The median personal income of $800 per week and median family income of $2,153 per week suggest Tempe is not exclusively high-end, but it still attracts established working households. Housing is heavily weighted to separate houses at 86%, with apartments only 7%, so it is better aligned to buyers wanting traditional housing rather than dense apartment living. With a median age of 38, it feels more mature than youth-driven. Tempe may suit families, couples, and professionals who want access and house stock, but it will suit lifestyle-first buyers less well because retail, culture, and safety are weaker.
What are the pros and cons of living in Tempe NSW 2044?
The main trade-off in Tempe NSW 2044 is that you get strong commuting convenience and a high house share, but you give up some lifestyle appeal and a stronger sense of comfort on safety. On the plus side, Tempe has 86% separate houses, train access on the T8 line, many bus services, and a public transport commute to the CBD of around 25 minutes. Walkability is also solid at 4 out of 5, which helps with day-to-day practicality. For buyers who want an Inner West address without moving into a heavily apartment-based suburb, that combination has real appeal. The compromises are clear though: safety is only 1 out of 5, retail and culture are both 2 out of 5, and canopy cover is just 12.02%, so Tempe is not especially leafy or lifestyle-rich. Buyers who care most about atmosphere, shopping, and a softer family feel may notice those limits more, while commuters and practical house buyers may find the trade-off worthwhile.
What are property prices like in Tempe NSW 2044?
Property prices in Tempe NSW 2044 look expensive by normal Sydney buyer expectations, especially for houses. Over the past six months, houses recorded 16 sales with a median price of $1.81 million, an average of about $1.84 million, and a 75th percentile around $1.95 million, which tells buyers that freestanding homes in Tempe are not entry-level stock. That pricing reflects the suburb’s Inner West location, strong house supply, and commuting convenience. Apartments are much less clear because there were only 2 recorded sales, so the data is too thin to treat as a reliable guide, even though one low result pulls the median down sharply. In practical terms, buying property in Tempe means houses require a serious budget, while unit pricing may appear more varied but needs careful property-by-property checking. The trade-off is paying a substantial amount for access and house stock without necessarily getting the stronger lifestyle or safety profile some buyers expect at that price point.
