
Voyager Point NSW 2172
Suburb summary
Voyager Point NSW 2172 is a South West Sydney suburb in the South West & Macarthur region, known for separate houses, family living and riverfront surroundings. The population is 1,668, median age 35, average household size 3.3, and 100% of dwellings are separate houses. Tree canopy cover is 38.78%, with River / Creek adjacent environmental features. Safety is rated 4/5. Median weekly personal income is $988 and family income is $2,762. In the past 6 months, Voyager Point house prices had a median of $1.75 million from 6 sales. Popular searches include Voyager Point NSW, Voyager Point house prices, Voyager Point property market, and family-friendly suburbs Sydney.
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
$1.6M
Derived from sales
House sales
17
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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35 popular houses in Voyager Point NSW 2172
Apartment projects
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Demographic info
Median age
37 years
Renters
20%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Voyager Point NSW 2172: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Voyager Point NSW 2172 a good suburb for families?
Voyager Point NSW 2172 is a solid suburb for families, especially for buyers who want a house-oriented area with a settled residential feel. The housing mix is a big plus for family buyers: separate houses make up 100% of homes here, apartments are effectively absent, and the average household size is 3.3, which points to a suburb built around family living rather than transient high-density demand. Safety also looks reasonably strong at 4 out of 5, and children are well represented in the age profile, with 6.9% aged 0 to 4 and 15.7% aged 5 to 14, which supports the sense that Voyager Point is good for kids and established households. The trade-off is that schools data is not especially strong enough here to make it a standout school-driven suburb on its own, and the suburb is not highly convenient on foot. So while Voyager Point is a good suburb for families wanting space and a quieter house setting, buyers prioritising top-tier school reputation or easy walk-everywhere convenience may want to weigh that carefully.
What is it like to live in Voyager Point NSW 2172?
Living in Voyager Point NSW 2172 feels calm, residential, and a little tucked away rather than busy or urban. It sits in South West Sydney with river or creek adjacency and a healthy 38.78% canopy cover, which gives the suburb a greener edge than many purely built-up areas. In day-to-day terms, the lifestyle in Voyager Point is more about home space, local streets, and a quieter family rhythm than café strips or constant activity. Safety is a relatively good 4 out of 5, which helps reinforce that settled feel. The compromise is convenience. Walkability is 1 out of 5, retail is 1 out of 5, and culture is 2 out of 5, so this is not the kind of suburb where most buyers will rely on strolling to shops, dining, or entertainment. That means living in Voyager Point will suit buyers who value space, greenery, and a more contained residential lifestyle, but it may feel too limited for those wanting a lively, highly walkable Sydney suburb.
Is Voyager Point NSW 2172 well connected for commuting?
Voyager Point NSW 2172 is mixed rather than especially well connected for commuting. In practical terms, public transport is available, but it is not a rail-based suburb at present. There is no train, no metro, and no light rail service in Voyager Point, although bus coverage is listed as many, which gives residents a usable transport option for broader connections. The average commute to the Sydney CBD is about 50 minutes by public transport and 35 minutes by car, so commuting is manageable but not especially fast by Sydney standards. The key trade-off is reliance on buses and driving. Buyers who prefer direct train access, multiple transport modes, or a simpler CBD run may find Voyager Point less convenient than more established transport hubs. On the other hand, for households that mostly drive, work locally, or only commute to the CBD occasionally, the suburb can still work well, especially if they value the residential setting more than peak transport convenience.
Who does Voyager Point NSW 2172 suit best?
Voyager Point NSW 2172 suits family buyers, upsizers, and professional households who want a house-based suburb with a more settled suburban profile. The housing stock is entirely separate houses, which is a strong signal for buyers seeking land, privacy, and a traditional home environment rather than apartment living. The median family income of $2,762 per week and managers and professionals share of 41.52% suggest Voyager Point attracts stable middle-to-upper-income households. The occupational mix is led by professionals at 27.75%, followed by clerical and administrative workers at 17.51% and managers at 13.77%, which points to a suburb with a solid owner-occupier style buyer base. Rental share is relatively low at 19.88%, adding to the more tightly held feel. It may suit downsizers or apartment-first buyers less well, simply because the suburb offers no real apartment market and limited walkable convenience. Voyager Point is best for buyers who prioritise house living, space, and a quieter setting over density and buzz.
What are the pros and cons of living in Voyager Point NSW 2172?
The main trade-off in Voyager Point NSW 2172 is that you get space, safety, and a greener residential setting, but you give up a lot of daily convenience. On the plus side, Voyager Point offers a 100% separate-house environment, relatively strong safety at 4 out of 5, many bus services, and notable tree canopy at 38.78%. For buyers who want a proper house suburb with a quieter feel and less density, those are meaningful strengths. The lower rental share also adds to the sense of stability many owner-occupiers look for. The downside is that convenience is limited. Walkability is 1 out of 5, retail is 1 out of 5, and there is no train, metro, light rail, or ferry access in the suburb itself. That means errands, dining, and commuting are less effortless than in better-connected Sydney locations. Buyers who care most about walkable amenity or fast public transport will notice that compromise. Still, for the right buyer, especially a family focused on house living, Voyager Point can be a very good fit.
What are property prices like in Voyager Point NSW 2172?
Property prices in Voyager Point NSW 2172 look expensive in practical Sydney buyer terms, though not at the very top end of the market. In the most recent six-month sales data available, houses had a median sale price of $1.75 million from 6 recorded sales, with an average of about $1.94 million. The middle of the market appears fairly broad, with the 25th percentile at $1.725 million and the 75th percentile at $2.2 million, which suggests pricing can move meaningfully depending on the home and block. What that means for buyers is that entering Voyager Point usually requires a serious family-house budget rather than an entry-level one. You are paying for detached housing, space, and a more established suburban feel, not for walkable retail or premium transport convenience. That is the trade-off. Buyers who want a full house environment may see reasonable value compared with more blue-chip areas, while budget-sensitive buyers may find the house prices in Voyager Point still quite demanding.
