
Windsor Downs NSW 2756
Suburb summary
Windsor Downs, NSW 2756 is a rural residential suburb in Sydney’s Outer West, known for large-lot living and bushland or national park adjacency. The suburb covers 7.5757 sq km, has a population of 1,179, low density of 155.63 people per sq km, median age 45, and average household size 3.3. Housing is entirely separate houses, with no apartments recorded. Median weekly personal income is $831 and family income is $2,374. Recent Windsor Downs house sales show a median price of $2.15 million from 2 sales in the past 6 months. Public transport is limited, with train nearby and average CBD commute times of 120 minutes by public transport and 55 minutes driving.
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
$2.5M
Derived from sales
House sales
9
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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13 popular houses in Windsor Downs NSW 2756
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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Demographic info
Median age
49 years
Renters
10%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Windsor Downs NSW 2756: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Windsor Downs NSW 2756 a good suburb for families?
Windsor Downs NSW 2756 is a solid suburb for families, especially those who want space and a quieter residential setting rather than an urban, walk-everywhere lifestyle. The housing mix is strongly family-oriented, with 100% separate houses and no meaningful apartment presence, and the average household size of 3.3 suggests homes are set up for larger family living. Children make up a reasonable part of the suburb, with 10.9% aged 5 to 14 and 3.2% aged 0 to 4, which supports the sense that Windsor Downs is good for kids in practical day-to-day terms. Safety sits at 2 out of 5, so this is not a suburb you would describe as strongly family-friendly on safety alone, even though the low-density format and house-based environment will still appeal to many upgraders. School ratings are mixed, with primary stronger than secondary, so family buyers should still check exact schooling priorities.
What is it like to live in Windsor Downs NSW 2756?
Living in Windsor Downs NSW 2756 feels quiet, spacious and semi-rural rather than busy or highly urban. The suburb character reads as rural residential, and the bushland and national park adjacency reinforce that sense of space and separation from denser Sydney precincts. For buyers asking what it is like to live in Windsor Downs, the lifestyle is likely to suit people who value larger blocks, lower-density surroundings and a more tucked-away everyday feel. That said, this is not a suburb built around convenience. Walkability is 1 out of 5, retail is 1 out of 5 and culture is 2 out of 5, so day-to-day living is more car-dependent and less about strolling to shops or cafés. Windsor Downs will feel appealing if you want room and a quieter setting, but less so if your ideal suburb lifestyle means strong local amenity, street activity and easy errands on foot.
Is Windsor Downs NSW 2756 well connected for commuting?
Windsor Downs NSW 2756 is mixed rather than strongly connected for commuting. It does have nearby train access via the T1 line at Windsor, which is useful, but the suburb itself is not a direct rail hub and bus services are limited. For buyers focused on public transport, the average CBD commute is about 120 minutes, which places Windsor Downs on the outer end of a Sydney work trip. Driving is more manageable at around 55 minutes on average, so the suburb will make more sense for households that rely on a car or have flexible commuting patterns. There is no metro, light rail or ferry option shaping the daily transport picture, so Windsor Downs is not one of Sydney’s best suburbs for commuters who want multiple transport modes. Still, for buyers prioritising land, house size and a quieter setting over commute speed, that trade-off may be acceptable.
Who does Windsor Downs NSW 2756 suit best?
Windsor Downs NSW 2756 suits buyers who want a full house, more land around them and a lower-density lifestyle, especially established families, trade-based households and owner-occupiers who are less reliant on inner-city convenience. The suburb’s housing stock is entirely separate houses, the rental share is very low at 3.2%, and the median age of 45 points to a mature, more settled community rather than a transient one. Occupation data is also telling: technicians and trades workers are the largest group at 19.8%, followed by professionals at 17.4% and managers at 16.6%, so Windsor Downs has a practical, established owner-family profile rather than an apartment-investor feel. Median family income of $2,374 per week supports that picture. It may suit apartment buyers, first-home buyers chasing walkability, or highly CBD-focused professionals less well, because Windsor Downs offers space and stability more than convenience and fast transport.
What are the pros and cons of living in Windsor Downs NSW 2756?
The main trade-off in Windsor Downs NSW 2756 is simple: you get space, houses and a quieter outer-suburban setting, but you give up convenience and faster access to the rest of Sydney. On the plus side, Windsor Downs is entirely made up of separate houses, has a very low rental share, and sits beside bushland and national park areas, which all point to a more settled and spacious living environment. That will appeal to buyers who want breathing room, privacy and a less built-up feel. The compromise is that walkability and retail are both just 1 out of 5, bus services are limited, and the CBD commute is long by public transport. Safety is also only 2 out of 5, which means buyers should keep their suburb shortlist balanced rather than assuming the quiet setting automatically means stronger overall liveability. For the right buyer, though, Windsor Downs can still be a very good fit.
What are property prices like in Windsor Downs NSW 2756?
Property prices in Windsor Downs NSW 2756 look expensive rather than entry-level, particularly for buyers targeting houses. In the recent sales data available, houses had a median price of about $2.15 million, with an average around $2.35 million, based on a small number of sales over the past six months. That points to Windsor Downs being a suburb where buyers are typically paying for land, full-house living and a spacious outer-west setting rather than apartment-style affordability. There was no apartment pricing in the recent result set, which also fits the suburb’s house-only profile. In practical terms, buying property in Windsor Downs means budget pressure is likely to come from the cost of securing a standalone home, even if you are not paying for inner-city convenience or beachside prestige. The trade-off is clear: you are spending more for house scale and space, while accepting a less connected and less walkable lifestyle.
