
Woodcroft NSW 2767
Suburb summary
Woodcroft NSW 2767 is a residential suburb in Western Sydney with a population of 6,440 across 1.693 sq km. Popular for Woodcroft NSW property and family living, it has an average household size of 3.5, median age 35, and median weekly family income of $2,221. Housing is entirely separate houses, with 23 house sales in the past 6 months and a median house price of $950,000. Public transport to the Sydney CBD averages 70 minutes, or 45 minutes by car. The suburb has primary and secondary education ratings of 4/5, while safety, retail, walkability, and culture are rated 2/5.
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
$1.1M
Derived from sales
House sales
58
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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120 popular houses in Woodcroft NSW 2767
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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12 popular apartments in Woodcroft NSW 2767
Demographic info
Median age
38 years
Renters
20%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Woodcroft NSW 2767: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is WOODCROFT NSW 2767 a good suburb for families?
WOODCROFT NSW 2767 is a solid suburb for families, especially buyers who want a house-focused area with practical day-to-day livability rather than prestige appeal. The strongest family signal here is the housing mix: WOODCROFT is essentially all separate houses, with no meaningful apartment presence, and the average household size of 3.5 points to established family living. Children are also well represented, with about 5.7% of residents aged 0 to 4 and 13.1% aged 5 to 14, which supports the sense that this is a suburb where family households are common rather than unusual. School ratings are also a positive, with both primary and secondary education sitting at 8 out of 10. The trade-off is that safety is more mixed than standout at 2 out of 5, so while WOODCROFT can still be a good suburb for families and good for kids in a housing and schooling sense, buyers seeking a more peaceful or higher-rated environment may want to compare it with stronger-performing family suburbs nearby.
What is it like to live in WOODCROFT NSW 2767?
Living in WOODCROFT NSW 2767 feels practical, suburban, and house-led rather than vibrant or highly walkable. It sits in Western Sydney and reads as a straightforward residential suburb, with an urban built-up setting rather than a leafy village atmosphere. That is reflected in the lower canopy cover of 15.16%, so buyers looking for lush streetscapes or a distinctly green feel may find WOODCROFT more functional than picturesque. Day-to-day convenience is present, but only in a limited way, with walkability, retail, and culture all at 2 out of 5. In real terms, that means living in WOODCROFT is likely to suit households who are comfortable driving for errands, sport, and dining rather than expecting a walk-everywhere lifestyle. The upside is space and a more grounded suburban rhythm, especially for house buyers. The trade-off is that the WOODCROFT lifestyle is less about buzz, charm, or strong local amenity, and more about practicality and residential consistency.
Is WOODCROFT NSW 2767 well connected for commuting?
WOODCROFT NSW 2767 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s most seamless public transport suburbs. The suburb does not have its own train station, although rail access is nearby through Mount Druitt on the T1 and T5 lines, and bus service levels are strong, with many bus options noted. For many buyers, that means WOODCROFT can work for commuting to the Sydney CBD, but the trip is more likely to involve a bus connection or a short drive before boarding rail. The average public transport commute to the CBD is about 70 minutes, while driving is around 45 minutes, so the suburb tends to be more comfortable for buyers who are realistic about Western Sydney travel times. There is no current metro, light rail, or ferry support here, which is the main limitation. WOODCROFT still suits commuters who prioritise house living and accept a longer trip in exchange for that suburban format.
Who does WOODCROFT NSW 2767 suit best?
WOODCROFT NSW 2767 suits family buyers, upgrader households, and practical owner-occupiers who want a detached home environment in Western Sydney. The housing mix is the clearest clue: WOODCROFT is entirely house-based, which makes it naturally more relevant to buyers who want land, multiple bedrooms, and a conventional suburban layout rather than apartment living. The resident profile also suggests a stable working household market, with professionals making up the largest occupation group at 24.6%, followed by clerical and administrative workers at 20.8% and trades at 10.3%. Median family income of $2,221 per week and a median age of 35 reinforce that this is a suburb with established working families and mid-life households. Rental presence is moderate rather than dominant, at about 16.9%, which supports an owner-occupier feel. The trade-off is that WOODCROFT may suit downsizers, ultra-urban buyers, and walkability-focused professionals less well, because it is not built around apartments, café culture, or fast inner-city-style convenience.
What are the pros and cons of living in WOODCROFT NSW 2767?
The main trade-off in WOODCROFT NSW 2767 is simple: you get a house-focused suburban setting, but you give up some convenience, atmosphere, and transport ease compared with more connected Sydney suburbs. On the plus side, WOODCROFT is strongly aligned with buyers who want a detached home environment, with 100% separate-house stock, a family-sized average household of 3.5, and relatively low renter turnover at 16.9%. Nearby train access, many buses, and school ratings of 8 out of 10 also make it more functional than isolated. On the other hand, walkability, retail, culture, and safety all sit at 2 out of 5, while canopy cover is modest, so buyers should not expect a particularly lively, leafy, or polished local feel. Commutes are also on the longer side into the CBD. For buyers who care most about land, home size, and a practical suburban base, WOODCROFT can still be a good fit. Those wanting a more vibrant or higher-amenity lifestyle may feel the compromises more.
What are property prices like in WOODCROFT NSW 2767?
Property prices in WOODCROFT NSW 2767 look mid-range to relatively accessible by Sydney house standards, especially for buyers targeting a detached home rather than a prestige address. Recent sales data shows houses with a median price of $960,000 from 21 sales over the past six months, with the middle market broadly sitting between about $870,000 and $1,212,000. That suggests WOODCROFT remains a realistic buying property option for households wanting a four-bedroom style house market in Western Sydney without stepping into premium North Shore or Eastern Suburbs pricing. Apartment data is very limited, with only two recent sales and a median around $923,000, so the suburb is clearly not driven by unit stock. In practical terms, house prices in WOODCROFT indicate that buyers are mainly paying for detached-home living and family functionality rather than lifestyle prestige or standout transport access. The trade-off is that while WOODCROFT is less expensive than many house-centric Sydney suburbs, buyers still need to accept a more built-up setting and a longer CBD commute.
