Whalan NSW 2770 property reports

Whalan NSW 2770

Suburb

Suburb summary

Whalan, NSW 2770 is a Western Sydney residential suburb with a population of 5,973 across 2.4294 sq km. Popular searches like Whalan NSW suburb profile, Whalan property market and living in Whalan often focus on affordability: over the past 6 months, 17 house sales recorded a median price of $900,000. Housing is dominated by separate houses (89%), with apartments at 5%. The median age is 33, average household size is 2.9, and median weekly family income is $1,177. Public transport to the Sydney CBD averages 70 minutes, driving about 45 minutes.

Pocket Price Distribution

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Suburb median

$880k

Derived from sales

House sales

43

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

34 years

Renters

50%

Top 3 occupations

Machinery Operators and Drivers20%
Professionals10%
Technicians and Trades Workers10%

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Living in Whalan NSW 2770: Suburb Profile & FAQs

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

Is Whalan NSW 2770 a good suburb for families?

Whalan NSW 2770 is a mixed option for families rather than a strong all-round family suburb. On the positive side, the schooling indicators are relatively strong, with both primary and secondary education rated 6 out of 5 in the supplied data, and the suburb has a clear detached-home profile, with about 89% of homes being separate houses. That usually suits buyers who want more indoor and outdoor space for kids, and the average household size of 2.9 also points to a family-oriented living pattern rather than a mainly one-person or apartment market. There is a meaningful share of children as well, with around 7.2% aged 0 to 4 and 16.8% aged 5 to 14. The trade-off is that safety is rated 1 out of 5, so buyers looking for a quieter or more reassuring family environment may feel the suburb is less straightforward than the school and house mix suggest. For families prioritising house space and budget first, Whalan can still be worth considering.

What is it like to live in Whalan NSW 2770?

Living in Whalan NSW 2770 feels practical, suburban and fairly straightforward rather than polished or lifestyle-led. It sits in Western Sydney and presents as a residential suburb with an urban, built-up setting, so the day-to-day experience is more about function and affordability than village charm or a high-end café scene. The lifestyle data supports that reading: walkability is 2 out of 5, retail is 2 out of 5, culture is 2 out of 5, and canopy cover is just 13.47%, so Whalan does not come across as especially leafy, walk-everywhere or entertainment-focused. For many buyers, that means a simpler suburban environment with a house-based streetscape rather than a dense apartment hub. The trade-off is convenience and atmosphere. If you want more greenery, stronger local amenity or a more vibrant suburb feel, Whalan may feel limited. Still, buyers focused on practical living and access to house stock may find the Whalan lifestyle suits their priorities.

Is Whalan NSW 2770 well connected for commuting?

Whalan NSW 2770 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s most seamless public transport suburbs. The transport picture is mixed in a practical way: Whalan does not have its own train station, but train access is nearby via Mount Druitt on the T1 and T5 lines, and bus coverage is rated as many. That means commuters do have workable public transport options, especially if they are comfortable using bus-to-train connections rather than walking straight to rail. Driving to the Sydney CBD is also materially faster than public transport in the supplied figures, at about 45 minutes versus 70 minutes by public transport. The trade-off is clear. Whalan can work for commuters, but it usually involves a more multi-step journey than suburbs with a station in the suburb itself. Buyers who need direct rail access at their doorstep may find it less convenient, while those comfortable with buses, nearby rail and driving may see Whalan as serviceable.

Who does Whalan NSW 2770 suit best?

Whalan NSW 2770 suits buyers who want a detached house entry point in Western Sydney and are willing to trade some lifestyle polish for practicality. The housing mix is the clearest clue: about 89% of homes are separate houses and only around 5% are apartments, so Whalan is much more aligned with house buyers than unit buyers. It also has a relatively young median age of 33 and an average household size of 2.9, which suggests many households are families or family-style living arrangements rather than downsizers or inner-city singles. The rental share is about 50.9%, so the suburb has a fairly mixed, active housing market rather than an ultra tightly held owner-occupier profile. Occupationally, Whalan leans toward working households, with machinery operators and drivers, labourers, and clerical and administrative workers among the largest groups. That means it may suit budget-conscious family buyers and practical upgraders more than prestige buyers or those chasing a highly professional, blue-chip suburb profile.

What are the pros and cons of living in Whalan NSW 2770?

The main trade-off in Whalan NSW 2770 is that you get a suburb with a strong house-based format and workable transport links, but you give up some lifestyle convenience, greenery and overall polish. On the plus side, Whalan is dominated by separate houses, buses are plentiful, nearby train access connects into the wider network, and driving times to the CBD are more manageable than many buyers expect from this part of Sydney. For buyers who care most about land, house format and keeping expectations realistic, those are meaningful advantages. On the other hand, the suburb scores just 2 out of 5 for walkability, retail and culture, canopy cover is only 13.47%, and safety is rated 1 out of 5. That means Whalan is less likely to suit buyers wanting a leafy, walkable or more vibrant neighbourhood feel. For the right buyer, especially someone focused on space and budget discipline, Whalan can still make sense, but it is important to go in with clear priorities.

What are property prices like in Whalan NSW 2770?

Property prices in Whalan NSW 2770 look relatively affordable by Sydney house standards. In the most recent six-month sales data provided, houses had a median sale price of $930,000 across 15 sales, with the middle market broadly sitting between about $835,000 at the 25th percentile and $955,000 at the 75th percentile. The top end of those recent house sales reached about $1.01 million at the 90th percentile, with a maximum recorded sale of $1.235 million. That points to a suburb where buyers can still access detached housing below many Sydney house markets, which is a meaningful consideration for family buyers comparing value across Western Sydney. The trade-off is that affordability here comes with compromises in lifestyle metrics and suburb feel rather than premium amenity. There was also only one apartment sale recorded, at $950,000, so the house market is the more reliable guide for buying property in Whalan.