Wallacia NSW 2745 property reports

Wallacia NSW 2745

Suburb

Suburb summary

Wallacia, NSW 2745 is an Outer West Sydney suburb with a rural village character and River/Creek adjacent setting. The population is 1,627, with low density at 63.72 people per sq km, median age 40, and average household size 2.9. Housing is dominated by separate houses at 83%, with apartments at 8%. In the past 6 months, Wallacia recorded 4 house sales with a median sold price of $1.18M and 1 apartment sale at $2.30M. Local median weekly personal income is $723 and family income is $1,941. Wallacia appeals to buyers searching Wallacia property, Wallacia house prices, rural lifestyle Sydney, and Outer West Sydney real estate.

Pocket Price Distribution

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Suburb median

$1.2M

Derived from sales

House sales

16

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

38 years

Renters

20%

Top 3 occupations

Technicians and Trades Workers20%
Clerical and Administrative Workers20%
Managers10%

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Living in Wallacia NSW 2745: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Wallacia NSW 2745 a good suburb for families?

Wallacia NSW 2745 is a solid suburb for families, especially for buyers who value schooling strength, space and a quieter outer-west setting. The local school ratings are very strong, with both primary and secondary education at 4 out of 5, and the safety score also sits at 4 out of 5, which gives Wallacia a reassuring base for family buyers looking for schools and safety together. The housing mix also leans strongly toward family-style living, with about 83% separate houses and only around 8% apartments, while the average household size of 2.9 suggests the suburb is more geared to households than transient inner-city living. That said, Wallacia is not a high-convenience family suburb in the Sydney sense. Children aged 0 to 4 make up 6.3% of residents and those aged 5 to 14 account for 13.2%, so families are present, but it is not purely a child-dominated market. Buyers wanting walkable shops, fast transport and lots of nearby urban amenity may find the lifestyle a little less practical.

What is it like to live in Wallacia NSW 2745?

Living in Wallacia NSW 2745 feels rural, low-density and village-like, with a more relaxed pace than most Sydney suburbs. Wallacia sits in the Outer West and has a clear rural village character, with river or creek-adjacent environmental features adding to that more open, less built-up feel. For buyers asking what it is like to live in Wallacia, the lifestyle is more about space, breathing room and a quieter setting than café strips, shopping streets or a walk-everywhere routine. That impression is backed by low walkability at 1 out of 5, retail at 2 out of 5 and culture at 2 out of 5. The trade-off is straightforward. Wallacia can appeal strongly to buyers who want a less intense lifestyle and more traditional house-based living, but it is not the suburb for people who want a highly convenient urban environment. With no beach access and modest local amenity, day-to-day life is likely to be more car-based and more self-contained than in denser Sydney locations.

Is Wallacia NSW 2745 well connected for commuting?

Wallacia NSW 2745 is less convenient for commuting, especially if you rely on public transport every day. The suburb has no train, no metro, no light rail and no ferry, while bus services are limited rather than extensive. That transport picture shows Wallacia is not one of Sydney’s best-connected commuter suburbs, and the CBD travel times underline that: public transport to the Sydney CBD averages about 85 minutes, while driving averages around 55 minutes in workday conditions. For some buyers, that trade-off is acceptable because Wallacia offers a more spacious outer-west lifestyle than many better-connected areas. But if your priority is a fast commute to Sydney CBD, frequent public transport, or easy access to multiple transport modes, Wallacia will likely feel restrictive. It is more suitable for people whose work is local, hybrid or flexible, or for buyers who are comfortable driving regularly. In short, Wallacia works better for lifestyle-led buyers than for commuters who need quick and simple city access.

Who does Wallacia NSW 2745 suit best?

Wallacia NSW 2745 suits best buyers who want a house-focused outer-west lifestyle, especially households who prioritise space over convenience. The suburb’s dwelling mix is a strong clue here: around 83% of homes are separate houses and only about 8% are apartments, so Wallacia naturally fits buyers looking for land, lower density and a more traditional suburban or semi-rural setup. The rental share is about 18.6%, which also suggests a more owner-occupier-leaning feel than many higher-turnover suburbs. Income levels are moderate rather than prestige-tier, with median weekly personal income at $723 and family income at $1,941, while the median age of 40 points to an established, settled resident base. The suburb may particularly appeal to trades, clerical and managerial households, which aligns with the top occupation mix. The compromise is that Wallacia may suit downsizers wanting space, families wanting houses, and buyers with flexible commuting patterns more than buyers chasing apartment living, strong walkability, or a highly polished urban-professional lifestyle.

What are the pros and cons of living in Wallacia NSW 2745?

The main trade-off in Wallacia NSW 2745 is getting more space and a quieter village setting in exchange for lower convenience and weaker transport access. On the plus side, Wallacia has a safety rating of 4 out of 5, strong school ratings of 4 out of 5 for both primary and secondary, and a housing profile dominated by separate houses, which will matter to buyers who want room to spread out. Its rural village identity and river or creek-adjacent setting also give it a different feel from more built-up Sydney suburbs. The compromise is that daily convenience is limited. Walkability is only 1 out of 5, retail and culture are both 2 out of 5, bus service is limited, and there is no train, metro, light rail or ferry. Public transport commuting is long, and even driving to the CBD is not quick. Buyers who care most about cafés, errands on foot and easy city access will notice those drawbacks most. For the right buyer, though, those are acceptable trade-offs for space and a calmer setting.

What are property prices like in Wallacia NSW 2745?

Property prices in Wallacia NSW 2745 look mid-range by Sydney house standards, though the recent sales sample is very small, so buyers should treat it as a guide rather than a full market picture. In the last six months, the recorded house median was about $1.18 million from three sales, with recorded house prices ranging from roughly $930,000 to $1.31 million. That suggests buying property in Wallacia can still require a meaningful budget, but it sits below many of Sydney’s more expensive family-house markets. For house buyers wanting land and a lower-density setting, Wallacia may offer a more accessible entry point than prestige or tightly held school-belt suburbs. The main qualification is depth of evidence. Apartment data is based on only one sale at $2.3 million, which is not enough to describe a typical unit market. In practical terms, Wallacia reads more as a house buyer suburb, where value is tied to space and setting rather than high urban convenience.