micromarkets logo

micromarkets

HomeSuburbsInsightsPricingAbout
Get started
Log in
micromarkets logomicromarkets
››
Suburbs›NSW›The Hills District›Pitt Town Bottoms

Pitt Town Bottoms, NSW 2756

Property data updated June 2026·85 residents
Last 12 months snapshot
2 sales · 0 leases · Refreshed June 2026

Pitt Town Bottoms, NSW 2756 market activity

Pitt Town Bottoms's housing market is small — only a handful of recent activity, with 2 sales at around $2.15M, taking about 67 days to sell.

Family-focusedMortgage-belt

Who lives hereA mortgage-belt, family-oriented suburb.

House covers houses, duplexes, semi-detached and terraces; Unit covers apartments, units, townhouses and villas.

Census · ABS 2021

Snapshot

Population
85
Median age
29yrs
Avg household
4.4people
Male · Female
61% · 39%
Owner-occupied
81%
Renting
0.0%
Other families
64%
Couples, no kids
12%
Born overseas
13%
Year 12+ⓘ
25%

Pitt Town Bottoms on the map

5.73 km²
Loading map
Ranked against all suburbs
How well-off · ABS SEIFA 2021 · vs Australia
Overall advantageⓘ
Top 17%
decile 9/10
IRSAD — Index of Relative Socio-economic Advantage & Disadvantage. Combines income, education, occupation and housing. Higher = more advantaged overall.
Economic resourcesⓘ
Top 6%
decile 10/10
IER — Index of Economic Resources. Household income, rent/mortgage costs and dwelling size. Higher = more economic resources (lots of renters or students pulls it down).
Education & jobsⓘ
Top 50%
decile 5/10
IEO — Index of Education and Occupation. Residents’ qualifications and skilled occupations. Higher = a more educated, higher-skilled workforce.
IncomeMedian household incomeProfessionalsShare who are managers or professionalsDiversityBirthplace diversityMortgage stressMortgage repayments as a share of incomeTrain / busCommute by public transportNo carHouseholds with no carNew moversMoved in within the last yearRent stressRent as a share of income
Hover a point for its percentile · – – – median
LowMedianHighPercentile
Median household incomeⓘMiddle weekly income of all households — half earn more, half less.—
Rent stress (rent ÷ income)ⓘMedian weekly rent as a share of median weekly household income — a rough rental-affordability gauge. Higher = rent takes a bigger bite.—
Mortgage stress (repay ÷ income)ⓘMedian mortgage repayment (converted to weekly) as a share of median weekly household income. Higher = repayments take a bigger bite.—
Birthplace diversityⓘChance two random residents were born in different countries — 0 = everyone the same, 1 = all different.—
Born overseasⓘResidents born outside Australia, of those who stated a birthplace.—
Managers & professionalsⓘEmployed residents who work as managers or professionals.—
Unemployment rateⓘShare of the labour force (people working or actively looking) who are unemployed — not a share of all residents.—
Public transport to workⓘCommuters who travelled to work by train, bus, ferry or tram, of those who travelled.—
No motor vehicleⓘHouseholds with no motor vehicle.—
High-rise apartmentsⓘOccupied dwellings that are apartments in 4-storey-or-higher blocks.—
Settled 5+ yearsⓘResidents living at the same address as five years ago — how settled the community is.—
This suburb Typical range · 25–75th Median
How this suburb comparesPosition among all Australian suburbs — “Top 10%” means higher than 90% of them.
LowMedianHighPercentile
LowMedianHighPercentile
Owner-occupiedⓘHouseholds that own their home — outright or with a mortgage.—
RentingⓘHouseholds renting their home.—
Owned outrightⓘHouseholds that own their home outright, with no mortgage.—
Owned with mortgageⓘHouseholds buying their home with a mortgage.—
Separate housesⓘOccupied dwellings that are standalone (detached) houses.—
ApartmentsⓘOccupied dwellings that are flats or apartments, any height.—
Median personal incomeⓘMiddle weekly income of individuals aged 15+.—
Median family incomeⓘMiddle weekly income of families.—
Low earners (<$500/wk)ⓘResidents earning under $500 per week.—
Low-income households (<$650/wk)ⓘHouseholds with a total income under $650 per week.—
Full-time workersⓘResidents in the labour force who are employed full-time.—
Part-time workersⓘEmployed residents working part-time, of all employed.—
Not in labour forceⓘResidents 15+ neither working nor looking for work — retirees, students, carers.—
Community & personal serviceⓘEmployed residents in community and personal-service jobs — care, hospitality, security and similar.—
Clerical & adminⓘEmployed residents in clerical and administrative jobs.—
Sales workersⓘEmployed residents in sales jobs.—
Completed Year 12+ⓘResidents aged 15+ whose highest year of school is Year 12 or equivalent.—
In educationⓘResidents currently attending school, TAFE or university — full or part time.—
Children (0–14)ⓘResidents aged 0–14.—
Seniors (65+)ⓘResidents aged 65 and over.—
Youth dependencyⓘChildren (0–14) for every 100 working-age residents aged 15–64.—
Total dependencyⓘChildren (0–14) plus seniors (65+) for every 100 working-age residents aged 15–64.—
Australian citizensⓘResidents who are Australian citizens — Australian-born and naturalised.—
Both parents born overseasⓘResidents whose mother and father were both born overseas — the second generation.—
Established migrants (pre-2011)ⓘOf overseas-born residents, the share who arrived before 2011 — higher = a long-settled migrant community.—
Vehicles per dwellingⓘAverage number of motor vehicles per household.—
This suburb Typical range (middle 50%) Median suburb

Census data sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics — © Commonwealth of Australia, 2021 Census of Population and Housing and Socio-Economic Indexes for Areas (SEIFA) 2021 · Shares, ratios and percentiles shown are Micromarkets transformations of that data · licensed CC BY 4.0.

Census · ABS 2021

Who lives here

The age structure, household make-up, and cultural fabric of the people who call this suburb home.

Age & sex85 residentsMaleFemale
85+0.0% · 00.0% · 080-840.0% · 00.0% · 075-790.0% · 00.0% · 070-740.0% · 00.0% · 065-690.0% · 00.0% · 060-640.0% · 03.8% · 355-590.0% · 03.8% · 350-547.6% · 65.1% · 445-495.1% · 43.8% · 340-440.0% · 05.1% · 435-395.1% · 46.3% · 530-340.0% · 03.8% · 325-297.6% · 60.0% · 020-248.9% · 83.8% · 315-197.6% · 63.8% · 310-143.8% · 30.0% · 05-96.3% · 55.1% · 40-40.0% · 03.8% · 3◀ MaleFemale ▶

Share of all residents by 5-year band · hover a band for the count + split

Life stage
20%
19%
20%
33%
13%
Children0–1420%Youth15–2419%Young adults25–3420%Midlife35–5433%Mature55–6413%Seniors65+3.5%
Household composition
12%
12%
64%
Couples, no kids12%Families with kids12%Other families64%
4.4 people / household1.1 persons / bedroom31% are 5+ person
Household sizepersons per dwelling
0.0%1
25%2
0.0%3
19%4
0.0%5
31%6+
Cultural make-upshare of residents · diversity = odds two differ
Born overseasⓘResidents born outside Australia, as a share of those who stated a birthplace.13%
Other language at homeⓘResidents who mainly speak a language other than English at home — counts the language used, not how well English is spoken.20%
Limited EnglishⓘResidents who speak English “not well” or “not at all”. A language-barrier measure, not bilingualism — many who speak another language at home still speak English well.13%
Both parents overseasⓘResidents whose mother and father were both born overseas — the Australian-born-to-migrants “second generation”, distinct from being born overseas yourself.33%
Australian citizensⓘResidents who are Australian citizens — both Australian-born and people who have since naturalised.80%
Birthplace diversity32%
Chance two random residents were born in different countries
Language diversity44%
Chance two random residents speak different languages at home
Religious diversity57%
Chance two random residents follow different religions
Where residents were bornoverseas origins
China12%
Born in Australia82%
Languages at homeother than English
Cantonese18%
English only72%
Ancestry% reporting · multi-response
English39%
Chinese22%
Australian13%
Irish12%
Maltese11%
German7.1%
Faith & belieftap Christianity
No religion46%
▸Christianity46%
Buddhism6.0%

22% report Chinese ancestry, but only 12% were born in China — the gap is the Australian-born and diaspora Chinese community, invisible in birthplace alone.

Family originsparents’ birthplace
33%
17%
45%
Both parents overseas33%One parent overseas17%Both parents in Australia45%

A predominantly Australian-born community.

When migrants arrivedshare of overseas-born
Before 19810.0%
1981-20000.0%
2001-201042%
2011-201558%
2016-20210.0%

2020–21 understated — COVID border closures.

Census data sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics — © Commonwealth of Australia, 2021 Census of Population and Housing · Shares, ratios and percentiles shown are Micromarkets transformations of that data · licensed CC BY 4.0.

Census · ABS 2021

Affordability, Ownership & Housing

What it costs to live here, who owns versus rents, and the shape of the housing stock.

Affordability at a glance
LowMedianHighPercentile
Median weekly rentⓘMiddle weekly rent paid by renting households.—
Median monthly mortgageⓘMiddle monthly mortgage repayment among households with a mortgage.—
Rent stress (rent ÷ income)ⓘMedian weekly rent as a share of median weekly household income — a rough rental-affordability gauge. Higher = rent takes a bigger bite.—
Mortgage stress (repay ÷ income)ⓘMedian mortgage repayment (converted to weekly) as a share of median weekly household income. Higher = repayments take a bigger bite.—
High mortgage (≥$3k/mo)ⓘMortgaged households repaying $3,000 or more per month.—
Social housingⓘHouseholds renting from a state housing authority or community housing provider.—
This suburb Typical range (middle 50%) Median suburb
Bedrooms per dwellingshare of dwellings
0.0%0
0.0%1
0.0%2
31%3
31%4
0.0%5
0.0%6+
Who owns vs rentsoccupied dwellings
25%
56%
Owned outright25%Mortgage56%
What’s built heredwelling types
69%
House69%
69% separate houses0.0% apartments0.0% high-rise

Census data sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics — © Commonwealth of Australia, 2021 Census of Population and Housing · Shares, ratios and percentiles shown are Micromarkets transformations of that data · licensed CC BY 4.0.

Census · ABS 2021

Economy & Work

Incomes, employment, and the occupation mix of the people who live here.

Income & work at a glance
LowMedianHighPercentile
Median personal incomeⓘMiddle weekly income of individuals aged 15+.—
Median family incomeⓘMiddle weekly income of families.—
Managers & professionalsⓘEmployed residents who work as managers or professionals.—
High earners (≥$2k/wk)ⓘResidents earning $2,000 or more per week.—
This suburb Typical range (middle 50%) Median suburb
Occupations
LowMedianHighPercentile
Managers & professionalsⓘEmployed residents who work as managers or professionals.—
Clerical & adminⓘEmployed residents in clerical and administrative jobs.—
Community & personal serviceⓘEmployed residents in community and personal-service jobs — care, hospitality, security and similar.—
Sales workersⓘEmployed residents in sales jobs.—
Technicians, trades & labourersⓘEmployed residents in technical/trade, machinery-operating and labouring jobs.—
Household incomeheight = share of households · weekly
% of households$0$300$650$1.5k$2.5k$4k+
Personal incomeheight = share of residents 15+ · weekly
% of residents 15+$0$300$650$1k$1.8k$3.5k+

A typical household pulls in about 2.9× the typical individual — a multi-earner area.

Labour forceemployment status · residents 15+
48%
17%
15%
30%
Employed full-time48%Employed part-time17%Employed (away/other)15%Not in labour force30%
LowMedianHighPercentile
Full-time workersⓘResidents in the labour force who are employed full-time.—
Part-time workersⓘEmployed residents working part-time, of all employed.—
Unemployment rateⓘShare of the labour force (people working or actively looking) who are unemployed — not a share of all residents.—
Not in labour forceⓘResidents 15+ neither working nor looking for work — retirees, students, carers.—
Labour-force participationⓘResidents 15+ who are in the labour force — working or looking for work.—
This suburb Typical range (middle 50%) Median suburb

Census data sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics — © Commonwealth of Australia, 2021 Census of Population and Housing · Shares, ratios and percentiles shown are Micromarkets transformations of that data · licensed CC BY 4.0.

Census · ABS 2021

Getting Around

How people get to work, and how car-dependent the suburb is — the clearest tell of inner-urban versus outer-suburban living.

Transport at a glance
LowMedianHighPercentile
Public transport to workⓘCommuters who travelled to work by train, bus, ferry or tram, of those who travelled.—
Walked or cycled to workⓘCommuters who walked or cycled to work, of those who travelled.—
Worked from homeⓘEmployed residents who worked from home in the Census week — elevated by COVID in 2021.—
No motor vehicleⓘHouseholds with no motor vehicle.—
Vehicles per dwellingⓘAverage number of motor vehicles per household.—
This suburb Typical range (middle 50%) Median suburb
Journey to workamong commuters · top modes
Car (driver)88%
Other/combined19%
Vehicles per dwellingshare of households
0.0%0
0.0%1
19%2
38%3
50%4+

Census data sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics — © Commonwealth of Australia, 2021 Census of Population and Housing · Shares, ratios and percentiles shown are Micromarkets transformations of that data · licensed CC BY 4.0.


Education · ACARA My School 2025

Schools in and around Pitt Town Bottoms

No school inside Pitt Town Bottoms itself — the closest options around it are shown. Distances are straight-line from the suburb centre and are not enrolment catchments — always confirm zones with the school.

Within Pitt Town Bottoms0schools in the suburb itself
Primary schools7within 5 km · nearest 1.5 km
Secondary schools3within 5 km · nearest 3.7 km
Median ICSEA rank61stenrolment-weighted
What is ICSEA Rank?

ICSEA is ACARA’s official measure of a school’s socio-educational advantage — based mainly on parents’ education and occupation, plus the school’s location and student mix.

Nearby within8 schools
  • Nearby · within 5 km · 8Order by
  • 1
    Pitt Town Public SchoolGovernment · Primary · Co-ed · Years K-6 · Pitt Town · 1.5 km
    State Rank—English—Maths—Students290Multilingual7%ICSEA Rank41st
  • 2
    Wilberforce Public SchoolGovernment · Primary · Co-ed · Years K-6 · Wilberforce · 3.1 km
    State Rank—English—Maths—Students326Multilingual6%ICSEA Rank43rd
  • 3
    Windsor High SchoolGovernment · Secondary · Co-ed · Years 7-12 · Mcgraths Hill · 3.7 km
    State Rank—English—Maths—Students642Multilingual13%ICSEA Rank16th
  • 4
    St Matthew's Primary SchoolCatholic · Primary · Co-ed · Years K-6 · Windsor · 3.8 km
    State Rank—English—Maths—Students303Multilingual20%ICSEA Rank56th
  • 5
    Windsor Public SchoolGovernment · Primary · Co-ed · Years K-6 · Windsor · 3.8 km
    State Rank—English—Maths—Students125Multilingual19%ICSEA Rank22nd
  • 6
    Arndell Anglican CollegeIndependent · Combined · Co-ed · Years K-12 · Oakville · 3.8 km
    State Rank—English—Maths—Students1,220Multilingual9%ICSEA Rank73rd
  • 7
    Oakville Public SchoolGovernment · Primary · Co-ed · Years K-6 · Oakville · 4.5 km
    State Rank—English—Maths—Students612Multilingual35%ICSEA Rank61st
  • 8
    Longneck Lagoon Environmental Education CentreGovernment · Combined · Maraylya · 4.7 km
    State Rank—English—Maths—Students—Multilingual—ICSEA Rank—
GovernmentCatholicIndependent

Why are some State Rank and star ratings blank? Schools can choose not to publish their results. In practice, schools that score well above their state average almost always publish theirs — so a blank rating more often reflects a school opting out than a top result being hidden. Academic results also tend to rise with ICSEA Rank, so higher-ICSEA schools more often carry a strong State Rank as well.

School profile and ICSEA data sourced from ACARA — © Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority (data year 2025) · State Rank & star columns are Micromarkets-compiled academic ratings from publicly available school results · Distances are straight-line from the suburb centre, not catchments.


Census · ABS 2021

Turnover

How settled or transient the community is — and where newcomers came from.

Settledness at a glance
LowMedianHighPercentile
Settled 5+ yearsⓘResidents living at the same address as five years ago — how settled the community is.—
Moved in past yearⓘResidents living at a different address one year earlier.—
Arrived from overseas (5 yr)ⓘResidents who arrived in Australia from overseas within the past five years.—
This suburb Typical range (middle 50%) Median suburb
Where residents lived 5 years agoof those who stated
68%
15%
17%
Same address68%Moved within area15%From elsewhere in Australia17%
Residential paceshare of residents
Moved in the past yearⓘResidents living at a different address one year earlier.22%
Moved in the past 5 yearsⓘResidents not living at the same address as five years ago.32%
Arrived from overseas (5 yr)ⓘResidents who arrived in Australia from overseas within the past five years.0.0%
Property market
Market data

Snapshot

Headline price, rent, yield and time on market for Pitt Town Bottoms — choose a property type and size below.

Active segment
Houses
Units
Median priceⓘLast 12 months
2.15M
Days on marketⓘLast 12 months
67
SoldⓘLast 12 months
2
Months of supplyⓘLast 12 months
24.0mo
Median rentⓘLast 12 months
—
Days to leaseⓘLast 12 months
—
LeasedⓘLast 12 months
—
Gross yieldⓘLast 12 months
—%
Annualised
Data confidenceSales sample2Too thinLease sample0Too thinThin samples can swing month-to-month — treat single-figure deltas with care.
Market data

Segment breakdown

Every segment this suburb tracks — sales and rentals side by side, ranked by total activity over the last twelve months.

Year-on-year growth · demand percentile rank 0–100
Segment
Sales
Price
DOM
Leased
Rent
DOM
Yield
Market demand
01
Houses · 2 bed0 sales · 0 leases
Sales—
Price—
Sales DOM—
Leased—
Rent—
Rental DOM—
—
—
—
02
Houses · 3 bed0 sales · 0 leases
Sales—
Price—
Sales DOM—
Leased—
Rent—
Rental DOM—
—
—
—
03
Houses · 4 bed0 sales · 0 leases
Sales—
Price—
Sales DOM—
Leased—
Rent—
Rental DOM—
—
—
—
04
Units · 1 bed0 sales · 0 leases
Sales—
Price—
Sales DOM—
Leased—
Rent—
Rental DOM—
—
—
—
05
Units · 2 bed0 sales · 0 leases
Sales—
Price—
Sales DOM—
Leased—
Rent—
Rental DOM—
—
—
—
06
Units · 3 bed0 sales · 0 leases
Sales—
Price—
Sales DOM—
Leased—
Rent—
Rental DOM—
—
—
—
All houses
Sales2
Price—
Sales DOM—
Leased—
Rent—
Rental DOM—
—
—
—
All units
Sales—
Price—
Sales DOM—
Leased—
Rent—
Rental DOM—
—
—
—
Market data

Where each segment ranks

Where each segment sits against its peers in the chosen geography — past the midline means it's outperforming the rest.

Metric
Ranked against

Market demandHow fast this market is moving — a velocity index built from trailing-year transaction volume and median days on market. Strong volume lifts the score; days on market drags it down, with the drag growing sharply once listings start lingering. Ranked against peers in the chosen geography.

Houses
0/3above median
02550 · MEDIAN75100
Percentile vs NSW
Value
Units
0/4above median
02550 · MEDIAN75100
Percentile vs NSW
Value
Market data

The buy-versus-rent equation

What it costs each week to own a property versus renting the same one — positive means buying carries the premium, negative means rent covers the mortgage.

Property
Compare to
NSW MEDIAN · +70%
Rent covers itRenting matches or beats the cost of owning−10% to 0%
BalancedMortgage roughly matches asking rent+30% to +60%
Far pricier to ownBuying costs much more than renting+100% to +130%+
BreakdownLast 12 months
Holding cost
Mortgage
Rent
Premium
Band
Assumes 80% LVR·6.0% rate·30y P&I
Premium = (weekly mortgage − weekly rent) ÷ weekly rent. Band thresholds are national breakpoints across ~11,400 eligible Australian segments — the Typical premium band spans national P25 to P75, so it’s literally what’s typical.
Market data

How strong is demand, and which way is it heading?

Two questions on one chart — how strong demand is right now, and which way it's heading year-on-year.

Side
View
Property
Compared against
Sales demand
0 segments · sales · vs Australia
rising
DOM change YoYis demand rising or falling?
falling
median
median
Recoveryweak but rising
Boomstrong and rising
Troughweak and falling
Peakstrong but easing
weakSales demandhow strong sales demand isstrong
Property segments · coloured by market phaseHover a point for its figures
Sales demand
How strong is sales demand — and is it rising or falling?
What this shows

Each dot is one of this suburb's property segments on the sales side. Left-right shows how strong sales demand is — combining how many properties sold in the last 12 months with how quickly they sold (median days on market). Top-bottom shows whether that demand is rising or falling compared to 12 months ago.

The two axes
Sales demandX axis
how strong sales demand is

A composite of 12-month sales volume and median days on market. Higher means more sales completed faster — stronger sales demand right now.

Days on market change (Year-on-year)Y axis
is demand rising or falling?

How much faster (or slower) sales are completing compared to 12 months ago. Top half means sales are completing faster than a year ago (demand growing).

Market data

Pitt Town Bottoms against the neighbourhood

Eight diagnostic views cutting the data a different way each time — Pitt Town Bottoms in blue, peers in colour.

Pair
View
Property
How fast — and is it getting faster?
0 peer segments · Total house
faster
DOM change YoYvs 12 months ago
slower
median
median
Recoveringquiet but accelerating
Boomingbusy and accelerating
Stalledquiet and slowing further
Coolingbusy but slowing
Pitt Town Bottoms · this suburb
Demand index
—vs Australia
Days on market
67 days—
Median price
$2.15M▲ +50.0% YoY
Sold (last year)
2▲ +175.0% YoY
Gross yield
8.00%
slowDays on marketmedian days to sellfast
This suburb Property segments · coloured by market phaseHover a point for its figures
PAIR 01 OF 08
How fast — and is it getting faster?
What this shows

Combines the current median days on market with how much faster or slower it is changing compared to last year. Top-right means a fast-selling market that is getting faster compared to last year — peak demand.

The two axes
Days on marketX axis
median days to sell

Median days a property sits on the market before selling. Right side = fewer days (faster).

Days on market change (Year-on-year)Y axis
vs 12 months ago

How much faster (or slower) sales are completing compared to 12 months ago. Top = sales completing faster than a year ago.

Market data

How much stock is available right now?

How long current listings would take to clear at the recent rate of sales or leases. Critical shortage and Oversupply only fire at the genuine tails of the national distribution — sales tip in under 0.7 months, rentals far faster, under 0.3.

View
Sales market
SegmentBandMonths of supply leftYoYYoY change12-month change in months of supply. Down means stock is tightening (fewer months than a year ago); up means stock is loosening.ListedListedActive listings in this segment right now, derived from months of supply multiplied by the recent transaction rate.SoldSold (last year)Total sold transactions completed in this segment over the last 12 months.Per monthPer monthAverage monthly absorption — how many properties are sold each month in this segment, over the last 12 months.
median
Rental market
SegmentBandMonths of supply leftYoYYoY change12-month change in months of supply. Down means stock is tightening (fewer months than a year ago); up means stock is loosening.ListedListedActive listings in this segment right now, derived from months of supply multiplied by the recent transaction rate.LeasedLeased (last year)Total leased transactions completed in this segment over the last 12 months.Per monthPer monthAverage monthly absorption — how many properties are leased each month in this segment, over the last 12 months.
median
Severe
Very Tight
Tight
Balanced
Loose
Very Loose
Saturated
Under-suppliedOver-supplied
Market data

Who's transacting — buyers or tenants?

Out of every property transaction in this suburb, what share are sales versus leases — each point a rolling twelve-month window.

Property
Pitt Town Bottoms — Units & Houses, all bedrooms
Mar 2023 – May 2026 · each point = a 12-month window
0%25%50%75%100%2024
Sales · buyer transactions
Leases · tenant transactions
Latest tenant share · trailing year
0.0%

of Pitt Town Bottoms's transactions in the year to May 2026 were leases.

5-year shift

Tenant share moved ↑ 0.0 pts since the 12 months ending Mar 2023, from 0.0% to 0.0%.

Market data

Five-year arc — how this market has moved

Each tape traces one metric across sixty months for the selected segment — every point a trailing twelve-month figure, matching the headline KPIs above.

Property
Bedrooms
Median price (trailing year)
May 2026
$2.15M-0.1%
5y median $2.15Mvs last year $2.15M
Total sales (trailing year)
May 2026
2+0.0%
5y median 2vs last year 2
Days on market (trailing year)
May 2026
67 days-32
5y median 67 daysvs last year 99 days
Median rent
No data
Total leases
No data
Days on market (rental)
No data
Gross yield (trailing year)
Mar 2026
2.10%+0.00 pt
5y median 2.20%vs last year 2.10%
Months of supply
May 2026
18.0 months+200.0%
5y median 30.0 monthsvs last year 6.0 months
Months of supply (rental)
No data
Market data

Nearby markets

Every market within reach of Pitt Town Bottoms, ranked by distance — each compared against this suburb's Houses · Total segment so divergence reads at a glance.

Market
Property
Bedrooms
Radius
Colour by
This marketPitt Town BottomsNSW 2756 · Houses · Total
Price$2.15M
DOM67 days
Sold2
9 markets within 5kmLast 12 months
01
Pitt TownNSW 2756 · 2.5km · Houses · Total
Price$1.81M
DOM53 days
Sold52
cheaperfaster
02
McGraths HillNSW 2756 · 3.0km · Houses · Total
Price$1.15M
DOM29 days
Sold53
much cheapermuch faster
03
CornwallisNSW 2756 · 3.4km · Houses · Total
Price—
DOM150 days
Sold1
much slower
04
WilberforceNSW 2756 · 3.9km · Houses · Total
Price$1.37M
DOM29 days
Sold40
much cheapermuch faster
05
WindsorNSW 2756 · 4.0km · Houses · Total
Price$1.01M
DOM57 days
Sold32
much cheaperfaster
06
Freemans ReachNSW 2756 · 4.1km · Houses · Total
Price$1.10M
DOM25 days
Sold25
much cheapermuch faster
07
MulgraveNSW 2756 · 4.5km · Houses · Total
Price$1.07M
DOM25 days
Sold1
much cheapermuch faster
08
ScheyvilleNSW 2756 · 4.7km · Houses · Total
Price—
DOM150 days
Sold—
much slower
09
OakvilleNSW 2765 · 4.8km · Houses · Total
Price$1.31M
DOM54 days
Sold110
much cheaperfaster
Loading map
Houses · TotalSales market
Stat colourHow each suburb's stat compares to Pitt Town Bottoms
Much lowerLowerSimilarHigherMuch higher
Market data

Frequently asked · Pitt Town Bottoms

11 data-driven answers about Pitt Town Bottoms's property market — every one computed from the metrics above.

Browse by
  • What things costPrices, rent, yield, ownership cost1
  • How the market is movingSpeed, supply, growth, cycle phase2
  • How it comparesVs state, vs nearby, vs popular2
  • About the areaPopulation, income, who lives here, schools5
  • About this dataMethodology and update cadence1

What things cost

Prices, rent, yield, ownership cost
01

What is the median house price in Pitt Town Bottoms?

#

The median house price in Pitt Town Bottoms, NSW 2756 is $2.15M as of June 2026, based on 2 sales recorded over the past 12 months. Prices vary by bedroom count, from compact two-bedroom homes to larger four-bedroom houses. See the bedroom-level breakdown below for 2-, 3- and 4-bedroom medians.

How the market is moving

Speed, supply, growth, cycle phase
02

How quickly do houses sell in Pitt Town Bottoms?

#

Houses in Pitt Town Bottoms sell in a median 67 days on market as of June 2026. Faster clearance typically coincides with stronger buyer demand and lower supply.

03

Is Pitt Town Bottoms a tight or loose property market right now?

#

Pitt Town Bottoms's sales market sits at 24.0 months of supply for houses as of June 2026 — classified as Saturated (extreme oversupply) against the Australian distribution. Under 1.7 months is Severe (extreme shortage); over 4.5 months is Loose.

How it compares

Vs state, vs nearby, vs popular
04

How does Pitt Town Bottoms compare to other NSW suburbs?

#

Pitt Town Bottoms's median house price ($2.15M) is 87% above the NSW median ($1.15M) as of June 2026. On selling speed, houses clear in 67 days vs 29 days state median.

05

How many properties were sold and leased in Pitt Town Bottoms last year?

#

Pitt Town Bottoms recorded 2 house sales and 0 unit sales over the 12 months to June 2026 — a combined 2 transactions. Segments with statistically thin samples are excluded from displayed figures.

About the area

Population, income, who lives here, schools
06

What is the population of Pitt Town Bottoms?

#

Pitt Town Bottoms, NSW 2756 is home to 85 residents (ABS Census 2021). The median resident age is 29, and the average household holds 4.4 people. The "Who lives here" section above breaks the community down by age, life stage and tenure.

07

What is the median household income in Pitt Town Bottoms?

#

The median household in Pitt Town Bottoms earns $3k per week — roughly $169k a year (ABS Census 2021). Median personal income runs $1k/week. Income, rent-to-income and mortgage-to-income context sits in the "Who lives here" section above.

08

Do people own or rent in Pitt Town Bottoms?

#

Pitt Town Bottoms is mostly owner-occupied: about 81% of households are owner-occupiers and 0% rent (ABS Census 2021). Of owners, 25% own outright and 56% are paying off a mortgage.

09

What schools are near Pitt Town Bottoms?

#

Pitt Town Bottoms has 60 schools within reach — including Pitt Town Public School, Wilberforce Public School, Windsor High School. The Schools section above maps each one with sector, year range, enrolment, Micromarkets-compiled academic ratings and ICSEA (ACARA).

10

Is Pitt Town Bottoms a good place to live?

#

Pitt Town Bottoms, NSW 2756 has a population of 85, a median age of 29, a median household income around $3k/week, 0% of households renting (ABS Census 2021). There are 60 schools within reach. Whether it's the right fit depends on your priorities — these figures describe the community, housing mix and amenity rather than offer a verdict.

About this data

Methodology and update cadence
11

When was this Pitt Town Bottoms market data last updated?

#

This Pitt Town Bottoms market data was last updated June 2026. Figures are computed monthly from 12-month rolling windows of recorded sales and leases, with five years of monthly history behind the trend charts. Methodology, glossary and data sources are linked in the footer.

Micromarkets membership

See every suburb as clearly as Pitt Town Bottoms.

Your first report is on us. Membership unlocks unlimited suburb reports — near real-time prices, rental yield, supply & demand, and five years of history across every market you're weighing up.

  • Unlimited reports
  • Near real-time data
  • 50+ map views
  • 5-year history
View plans →From $149/mo · cancel anytime

Methodology

  • How metrics are calculated
  • Glossary of terms
  • Browse all suburbs
  • All NSW suburbs
  • About Micromarkets.ai

Suburbs near Pitt Town Bottoms

  • Pitt Town2.5km
  • McGraths Hill3.0km
  • Cornwallis3.4km
  • Wilberforce3.9km
  • Windsor4.0km
  • Freemans Reach4.1km
  • Mulgrave4.5km
  • Scheyville4.7km
  • Oakville4.8km
  • Clarendon5.9km
  • Vineyard5.9km
  • South Windsor6.2km
  • Richmond6.9km
  • Maraylya7.2km
  • Bligh Park7.2km
  • Gables7.5km
  • Glossodia7.8km
  • Cattai8.4km
  • Ebenezer8.5km
  • Windsor Downs8.6km
Disclaimer

Information is provided for general analytical purposes and does not constitute financial, investment, or property advice. Past performance does not predict future returns.

Micromarkets logo
micromarkets

Institutional-grade property market insights and spatial intelligence. Unlocking true market clarity.

[ SYS.STAT // ONLINE ]

Platform

  • Pricing & Plans
  • Market Insights
  • Client Dashboard

Data & Research

  • Suburb Directory
  • Methodology
  • Glossary

Organisation

  • About Micromarkets
  • Contact Sales

Legal & Compliance

  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2026 Micromarkets Technology Pty Ltd. All Rights Reserved.

// ENGINEERED_IN_MELBOURNE_AU