Macquarie Park is mostly a unit rentals market — house activity is almost zero, with 1,125 leases (down 6.4%) at $778 a week (up 9.6%), renting out in about 19 days (down from 20 days last year), one of the country's most in-demand unit rental markets, around half are 2-bedroom.
Unit sales are the only other notable market, with 400 sales (up 8.4%) at around $850K (down 6.3%), taking about 36 days to sell (down from 40 days last year), mostly 2-bedroom (around 55%). Then come 19 house sales at around $1.008M (one of the country's least in-demand house markets). 16 house rentals at $825 a week (one of the country's least in-demand house rental markets).
Who lives hereAn above-average-income, mostly-renter, young-professional suburb — strongly multicultural, apartment-dominated and newcomer-heavy.
House covers houses, duplexes, semi-detached and terraces; Unit covers apartments, units, townhouses and villas.
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.
The age structure, household make-up, and cultural fabric of the people who call this suburb home.
Share of all residents by 5-year band · hover a band for the count + split
30% report Chinese ancestry, but only 18% were born in China — the gap is the Australian-born and diaspora Chinese community, invisible in birthplace alone.
A fast-growing, recent-arrival migrant gateway.
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.
What it costs to live here, who owns versus rents, and the shape of the housing stock.
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.
Incomes, employment, and the occupation mix of the people who live here.
A typical household pulls in about 1.9× the typical individual — a multi-earner area.
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.
How people get to work, and how car-dependent the suburb is — the clearest tell of inner-urban versus outer-suburban living.
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
3 schools inside Macquarie Park, plus the closest options around it. Distances are straight-line from the suburb centre and are not enrolment catchments — always confirm zones with the school.
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.
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.
How settled or transient the community is — and where newcomers came from.
Headline price, rent, yield and time on market for Macquarie Park — choose a property type and size below.
Every segment this suburb tracks — sales and rentals side by side, ranked by total activity over the last twelve months.
Where each segment sits against its peers in the chosen geography — past the midline means it's outperforming the rest.
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.
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.
Two questions on one chart — how strong demand is right now, and which way it's heading year-on-year.
Eight diagnostic views cutting the data a different way each time — Macquarie Park in blue, peers in colour.
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.
Out of every property transaction in this suburb, what share are sales versus leases — each point a rolling twelve-month window.
Each tape traces one metric across sixty months for the selected segment — every point a trailing twelve-month figure, matching the headline KPIs above.
Every market within reach of Macquarie Park, ranked by distance — each compared against this suburb's Units · Total segment so divergence reads at a glance.
NSW markets whose Units · Total segment behaves most like Macquarie Park's on the buy side — ranked by a like-for-like blend of price, yield, days on market, ownership cost and cycle phase.
Comparable sales markets to Macquarie Park include Enfield (NSW 2136), Peakhurst (NSW 2210), Lewisham (NSW 2049), Waitara (NSW 2077), Arncliffe (NSW 2205), Ryde (NSW 2112), Carlingford (NSW 2118) and Gladesville (NSW 2111). Each link opens that suburb's full market report.
22 data-driven answers about Macquarie Park's property market — every one computed from the metrics above.
The median house price in Macquarie Park, NSW 2113 is $1.01M as of June 2026, based on 19 sales recorded over the past 12 months. Houses there have moved +22.2% year-on-year. 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.
The median unit price in Macquarie Park, NSW 2113 is $850k as of June 2026, based on 400 sales over the past 12 months. Units have moved −6.3% year-on-year and currently trade at roughly 84% of the median house price.
The median weekly house rent in Macquarie Park is $825 as of June 2026, drawn from 16 leases over the past 12 months. Units rent for around $778 per week. House rents have moved +5.1% year-on-year. Current vacancy pressure is shown in the supply section above.
Gross rental yield in Macquarie Park is 4.20% for houses and 4.70% for units as of June 2026, compared with the NSW unit median of 4.81%. Gross yield is annual rent divided by purchase price — it doesn't account for ownership costs like council rates, strata, maintenance or vacancy.
As of June 2026, Macquarie Park medians by bedroom count:
| Property | 1 bed | 2 bed | 3 bed | 4 bed | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Houses | — | $849k | — | — | $1.01M |
| Units | $654k | $938k | $1.38M | — | $850k |
Figures cover only segments with enough recent transactions to be statistically meaningful; sparse segments are excluded.
At the median Macquarie Park unit ($850k purchase, $778/week rent), weekly mortgage repayments sit at roughly $940 — about $162 more per week than renting. That gap is the ownership premium. Figures assume 80% LVR, a 6.0% interest rate and a 30-year principal-and-interest loan.
Macquarie Park's property market trends to June 2026: house prices rose +22.2% year-on-year and units −6.3%; weekly house rents moved +5.1%; homes sell in a median 190 days; sales supply sits at 0.0 months (severe). Read together — price, rent, selling speed and supply — they show which way the Macquarie Park market is leaning. The 5-year tape and demand cycle charts above plot the full trajectory.
As of June 2026 in Macquarie Park, house prices rose +22.2% over the year, gross rental yield is 4.20% against a NSW median of 3.39%, houses take a median 190 days to sell, sales supply is 0.0 months (severe). Capital growth, rental yield, selling speed and supply are the signals investors weigh — but these figures describe the market, not a recommendation. This is data, not financial advice; always do your own research and consider a licensed adviser.
Houses in Macquarie Park sell in a median 190 days on market as of June 2026, with units clearing slightly faster at 36 days. Faster clearance typically coincides with stronger buyer demand and lower supply.
Macquarie Park's sales market sits at 0.0 months of supply for houses as of June 2026 — classified as Severe (extreme shortage) against the Australian distribution. Under 1.7 months is Severe (extreme shortage); over 4.5 months is Loose. The rental side is looser at 1.5 months of supply.
House prices in Macquarie Park moved +22.2% over the 12 months to June 2026, while units moved −6.3%. The 5-year tape above plots the full monthly trajectory — showing where the market changed character rather than just crossing round numbers.
Macquarie Park's house rental market sits at 1.5 months of supply as of June 2026 — classified as Balanced, with 16 houses leased over the past 12 months. Units sit at 1.5 months. Tighter supply typically corresponds to faster letting and upward pressure on rents.
Macquarie Park's median house price ($1.01M) is 12% below the NSW median ($1.15M) as of June 2026. On selling speed, houses clear in 190 days vs 29 days state median. On gross yield, Macquarie Park sits at 4.20% vs 3.39% state median.
Macquarie Park's most-similar nearby market is Vineyard (29.9 km away) with a median house price of $1.12M — about 12% pricier. The Nearby and Similar markets sections above rank every peer within radius and by composite similarity across price, days on market, yield, ownership cost and cycle phase.
The most-transacted segment in Macquarie Park over the 12 months to June 2026 is 2 bed units with 223 sales. 1 bed units come second at 135 sales. The 'Most popular' panel above breaks down the top segments with weekly mortgage, rent and ownership-cost detail.
Macquarie Park recorded 19 house sales and 400 unit sales over the 12 months to June 2026 — a combined 419 transactions. On the rental side, 16 houses and 1,125 units were leased. Segments with statistically thin samples are excluded from displayed figures.
Macquarie Park, NSW 2113 is home to 11,071 residents (ABS Census 2021). The median resident age is 31, and the average household holds 2.0 people. The "Who lives here" section above breaks the community down by age, life stage and tenure.
The median household in Macquarie Park earns $2k per week — roughly $98k a year (ABS Census 2021). Median personal income runs $970/week. Income, rent-to-income and mortgage-to-income context sits in the "Who lives here" section above.
Macquarie Park tilts towards renters: about 31% of households are owner-occupiers and 66% rent (ABS Census 2021). Of owners, 10% own outright and 21% are paying off a mortgage.
Macquarie Park has 60 schools within reach, 3 of them inside the suburb itself — including NextSense School - Blind Deafblind Program, NextSense School - Spoken Language Program, NextSense School - Sign Bilingual Program. The Schools section above maps each one with sector, year range, enrolment, Micromarkets-compiled academic ratings and ICSEA (ACARA).
Macquarie Park, NSW 2113 has a population of 11,071, a median age of 31, a median household income around $2k/week, 66% 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.
This Macquarie Park 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.
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