The places you’ll likely want to avoid when living in, or visiting, Sydney.
As a whole, Sydney ranks as one of the safest global cities in the world; it was even “officially” ranked 5th out of the top 10 safest to visit back in 2019 by the Economist Intelligence Unit. Generally well-lit, with solid infrastructure and low total crime rates, there are few spots in Sydney where you’ll ever have to feel truly unsafe – even at night.
As is the case with any large greater urban area however, Sydney does have a number of areas that both crime statistics and the “eye test” will mark as dangerous suburbs overall.
The reasons for this can be mixed – being bases for organised crime, hotbeds for drugs and distribution, or concentrations of housing commission, for example – and combine with general ‘atmosphere’ to make a suburb dangerous in general.
Here’s our list of the 10 most dangerous suburbs in Sydney, based on a mixture of crime stats provided by the NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics & Research (data updated as of 2022) as well as a dose of personal experience.
Note that it’s important to look at stats on a per-capita basis, otherwise simply listing the total number of crimes in a suburb (as many other websites on this topic out there do) skews in favour of larger suburbs. Also note that these listed are not ranked in any particular order.
Visit our Sydney Suburbs Crime Statistics page for a full statistical breakdown of crime rates for all major crime types in every suburb of Sydney per population.
10. Blacktown
Blacktown’s status as a member on this list is something of a shame, as on the surface it has quite a lot to offer as a suburb in terms of daily conveniences.
It’s got good facilities for shopping, a decent mix of people from all different demographics, solid NBN coverage and also serves as a key transport interchange with good connectivity.
It’s also one of the biggest places on this list, so the raw quantity of its criminal offences is always going to be larger – however Blacktown also boasts one of the highest crime rates per capita as well.
Step outside the station and you’ll often be immediately harassed by teenagers for money, while pickpocketing is also common.
“Sure, there’s potentially good value for money in terms of the property market considering Blacktown’s nice mix of facilities – but when prices are relatively low in Sydney despite this, it’s a sign something’s up.”
There’s a high quantity of obvious drug users in almost every public park space, and the constant presence of police patrols are an indicator of the “high alert” level you have to be when visiting here at almost all times of day – particularly at night.
For potential residents, it also has a high rate of home theft as well as one of the highest instances of robbery (without a firearm) in all of greater Sydney. Sure, there’s potentially good value for money in terms of the property market considering Blacktown’s nice mix of facilities – but when prices are relatively low in Sydney despite this, it’s a sign something’s up.
Lastly, there’s nothing much to do here other than some alright-ish local markets so there’s no real reason to visit when you can stick to the likes of Parramatta not far away anyway.
9. Doonside
Doonside is another fairly well-equipped Sydney suburb that’s well-serviced by public transport (both bus and train) and has decent amenities to go along with its reasonable property prices.
It’s also a suburb that has two faces in that there’s a literal “wrong side of the track” demarcation that separates its standard, better area from its concentrated slice of housing commission spots. Basically: south equals bad, north equals better.
There’s a strong history of welfare dependency here and high rates of unemployment, which go hand in hand with prominent drug use to paint what is not a very pretty picture. Fighting in the streets, frequent muggings when coming home from the station at night, and even past instances of machete attacks and murders have all occurred in Doonside.
“It’s a suburb that has two faces in that there’s a literal “wrong side of the track” demarcation that separates its standard, better area from its concentrated slice of housing commission spots.”
Being harassed for cigarettes and spare change on public transport are frequent occurrences, and the suburb also boasts a high instance of domestic violence. If visiting, you’ll also want to avoid parking on the streets as there’s a good chance you’ll end up with a smashed car window if leaving your vehicle there for too long.
You have to feel for the hardworking residents on the “good” side of the tracks, as while it’s better it still carries the stigma of the suburb as a whole which can be a turn off when trying to sell property.
Merely having a decent collection of shops can’t offset enough of these negatives, and even those shops themselves have a much higher than average history of being robbed.
8. Claymore
While the Campbelltown region as a whole has gradually been improving after recent revitalisation efforts and continued development, Claymore remains one of greater Sydney’s most disadvantaged suburbs.
When there’s even a movement a few years back to rename the suburb to try and shake its negative reputation as a rebranding attempt, it should tell you something about what to expect.
Housing commission-heavy, the suburb ranks as home to the highest likelihood of home burglary in all of Sydney so you’ll want to secure your doors and windows if living or renting here. It can trace this heritage back to the 1980s when it was designated a housing commission project and has not had much luck or chance to evolve ever since.
“When there’s even a movement a few years back to rename the suburb to try and shake its negative reputation as a rebranding attempt, it should tell you something about what to expect.”
Claymore was also ranked among the five most disadvantaged suburbs in all of New South Wales during an independent study conducted in 2015 factoring in a mix of indicators ranging from education levels, criminal convictions and juvenile offences.
It’s hard not to feel bad for those who have been institutionalised here since birth with no real way out of the system, however even those with generous souls will want to stay away as a single person won’t be able to solve multi-generational social problems in a single visit.
7. Fairfield
Unlike most of the other suburbs on this list, Fairfield’s crime doesn’t just originate from inherent social problems or lack of employment opportunities.
Many of its problems can be traced back to its use as a location for the concentrated resettlement of refugees and other immigrants without proper planning or giving them much to look forward to – as a result, it’s been the site of some high-profile gang wars over the years.
These have combined to make it home to one of Sydney’s highest occurrences of robbery with a firearm, and while one could argue that those not members of gangs are never the intended target, it’s still not conducive to a safe-feeling environment. Police officers have been killed in the past, and it also ranks very highly per-capita for drug related offences as well.
“Unlike most of the other suburbs on this list, Fairfield’s crime doesn’t just originate from inherent social problems or lack of employment opportunities.”
It’s a shame as the multicultural element here and in South-Western Sydney in general does bring with it some great diversity in terms of food and dining options – Cabramatta nearby for example has improved a lot and offers some of the best and most underrated little restaurants in all of Sydney, as well as meeting people from different cultures and expanding your horizons.
Fairfield’s also home to some nice little streets that are quite leafy and offer reasonably-affordable housing given its location as well as good road access – but its layer of crime puts a damper on daily life here.
6. Merrylands
Merrylands is a bit of a tragic tale as far as Sydney suburbs go, having been transformed from decent to bad after a large quantity of housing commission was plopped within its midsts.
Since that point the situation has only continued to deteriorate, with it racking up firearm usage records and becoming renowned for topping the drive-by shooting rankings over the past decade.
There’s nothing like the sweet sounds of gunfire or police helicopters hovering overhead to rock yourself off to sleep at night.
Merrylands has also been cited as the origin point for a number of terrorist plots within Australia by special police forces, and it also tied first for its quantity of attempted murders over the last calendar year.
“Merrylands is a bit of a tragic tale as far as Sydney suburbs go, having been transformed from decent to bad.”
Car break-ins are frequent and abandoned cars can often be found on the streets, with many streets crammed with cars from large families sharing a single dwelling. Add in the unpleasantness of dumped furniture or garbage and a general lack of roadside greenery, and its not a very pretty package.
Gang activity has also been a regular occurrence here and in nearby Lidcombe. All of these variables greatly outweigh its pluses such as proximity to Parramatta and connectivity to the Sydney CBD, and good multicultural dining can be had elsewhere in more pleasant environments as well.
5. Shalvey
*1950’s radio announcer voice* “Want to be able to afford a house with a big yard in Sydney? Welcome to Shalvey, where you’ll want to invest half of that budget in home security, and the rest in weapons for those times you DO leave your new home!”
Another unfortunate housing commission hotspot that’s stuck in a perpetual poverty and welfare cycle without seemingly any chance of recovery, Shalvey (as well as the other Mt. Druitt satellite suburbs such as Whalan, Bidwill and Dharruk – basically the 2770 postcode as a whole) is dangerous, plain and simple.
Full credit goes to any and all social workers who put their time and safety on the line to aid such places, but there’s a generally depressing aspect to such situations as a whole.
“Another unfortunate housing commission hotspot that’s stuck in a perpetual poverty and welfare cycle without seemingly any chance of recovery.”
Massively high unemployment rates and no real local economy to speak of combine to make a formula for a bad situation, and that’s definitely the case here. Regardless of if it’s an institutional failing or not, there’s simply a very high ratio of, shall we say, “not nice” people here overall.
Car break-ins are frequent, residents drinking and swearing at passersby in the middle of the day outside their houses is a common occurrence, and simply making eye contact can unintentionally create an unpleasant incident. When there are literal street signs attempting to remind people not to commit domestic violence, well… you get the picture.
It’s been the location for famous documentaries such as Struggle Street which brought average Australians into the households of some of these disadvantaged communities, and a reminder to the rest of just how lucky we are (and how grateful we should be) simply to be middle-class.
4. Bankstown
A true all-rounder in the Sydney crime statistics olympics, the Bankstown region scores high points in all the key undesirable stats you’d want to avoid in a suburb to call home. Assault, rape, drug offences, theft, even a spot of murder – they’re all frequent entries in Bankstown’s portfolio on a per-capita basis that removes its large population from distorting its total figures.
It’s a large area in total and quite diverse from one part of the suburb to the other, with again a large multicultural community that offers good dining options that’s mostly offset by its generally dirty and hostile atmosphere.
Bankstown is improving and seeing continued development, but it’s far from where it needs to be yet, and despite it being a fairly major commuter hub many travellers will often actively avoid getting off at the station here.
“A true all-rounder in the Sydney crime statistics olympics, the Bankstown region scores high points in all the key undesirable stats you’d want to avoid in a suburb.”
Much of this development and waves of “new immigration” have pushed some of the undesirable elements further out to the likes of Liverpool (see below), but a high population of criminal element still calls Bankstown home.
Bikie gangs have used it as a base for decades, and much of its current immigrant community is still very insular and hostile against other demographics. Its crime rate has seen an annual decrease in recent years, however this has come from such a high initial base that it’s still worth being on high alert while here at night in particular.
Amenity-wise Bankstown is very well equipped and offers a wide range of big and small scale shopping as well as a pretty desirable 30 minute or so commute to the Sydney CBD, but property prices have risen quite a lot in recent years which has removed its other major benefit.
3. Liverpool
Liverpool is a prime example of a Sydney suburb in which a handful of good is somewhat outweighed by a larger blend of bad. It’s living proof that simply having a Westfield shopping centre and decent educational facilities along with good public transport can’t offset the overall culture of a suburb despite the efforts of local authorities to paint it as such.
Its malls and shopping areas are a haven for a range of miscellaneous hangers-on with a mix of alcohol and drug problems, and harassment is frequent for people simply walking while minding their own business. It’s also a hub for petty theft and break-ins, while assaults and homicide rates all rank inside the top ten per capita for all of New South Wales.
“Liverpool is a prime example of a Sydney suburb in which a handful of good is somewhat outweighed by a larger blend of bad”
As with many other suburbs with high levels of immigration without integration, much of Liverpool’s crime can be traced back to voluntary isolation of foreign communities rather than being that pleasant mix of sharing culture and attitudes that transplanting from elsewhere abroad should be. A hostile atmosphere soon follows, and turns people considering moving there from elsewhere or even visiting for the day to do some shopping off.
Even visiting the hospital here feels unsafe, which should be the last place you’d want to have that inkling. It’s probably appropriate, given the occurrence of multiple stabbings which haven taken place in its public spaces over the years.
As with Bankstown, Liverpool also nowadays suffers from high property prices that are not justified by the quality of living the suburb offers. Throw in high rates of drug use and distribution, and pretty much any other suburb not too far away – such as Holsworthy, Panania or even Cabramatta itself – would serve as a much better alternative to live than Liverpool.
2. Kingswood
Any time you have a brothel sitting proudly alongside your high street’s chemists and bakeries, you know you’re not exactly in the classiest place on Earth.
Its one saving grace will be proximity to the University of Western Sydney and TAFE, but that does nothing to detract from Kingswood’s numerous incidents of crime that occur in plain sight on a daily basis.
It all starts with the suburb’s large concentration of housing commission blocks around its train station, which leads to all the associated drama, petty crime and other social issues that entails.
“Add in a dose of theft from your clothesline, break-and-enters and all-round petty crime, and there’s almost no reason to choose here to live.”
Witnessing fights amongst drug users at the station doesn’t exactly make for a pleasant backdrop for the morning commute, yet this and other lovely occurrences are part of daily Kingswood life. At night, the train station becomes even more of a crime hotspot (particularly through the parks) making any potential walks home a literal roll of the drama dice.
As with other houso-heavy suburbs there’s a high rate of domestic violence institutionalised here, and frequent drug raids are carried out by police on a regular basis. Add in a dose of theft from your clothesline, break-and-enters and all-round petty crime, and there’s almost no reason to choose here to live – particular given Penrith’s newfound up-and-coming status.
Only the very outskirts of the suburb could be considered “sort of nice”, and even that is pushing it.
1. Tregear
The unfortunate and lingering posterchild for the correlation between high quantities of housing commission and crime rates, Tregear – another of the satellite suburbs fringing Mount Druitt – ranks as the cheapest place to buy property in Sydney for a reason.
Home to the highest crime rates per capita for a number of violent and dangerous crimes such as arson, attempted murder, breaching violence orders and an array of break-in related offences, it’s a downtrodden area despite continued attempts at intermixing private homes with public housing.
It’s again an area with little infrastructure, employment (one of the highest levels of unemployment in the state of NSW), or hope overall despite having some quality nature in the impressively roomy and well-equipped Tregear Reserve. Where unemployment rates head over a rate of 40% to those aged up to 24 years old, it’s no surprise that desperation and crime soon follow.
“Tregear ranks as the cheapest place to buy property in all of Sydney for a reason.”
If anything, the prevalence of suburbs such as this on high-crime-rate rankings is a testament for why creating entire suburbs clustered around public housing based on dated models and planning principles just doesn’t work.
The relationship between these and not only crime, but homelessness, mental health issues and drug addiction unfortunately continue to play out in full force here.
Street brawls involving poles and machetes, thrown bricks, intentionally hitting people with motor vehicles and more – while not regular or frequent occurrences – have all occurred in Tregear over the past several years. Domain also gave it the worst possible score of all suburbs in Sydney for crime during their annual liveability survey for 2019.
September 6, 2019
I completely agree with Matt , in my opinion he is spot on. I lived in Sydney’s Northwest for many years and I have a good idea about these suburbs.
Thanks for sharing Matt
January 7, 2020
Yes the northwest is what we should all strive to be. Souless (unless you like that hillsong sht), boring, meaningless. Go to work go home go to shops go home. How can there be crime when there is no life?
January 14, 2020
I’m not sure what it is you want from the north west of Sydney. What is it that you define as soulful, exciting, and meaningful? Our modern life is normally a cycle of going to work, going to the shops and going home. Unless you want to live as a self sufficient farmer in the bush somewhere creating your own adventures as you go along, the modern suburban life cycle is the way of life for the vast majority of people in Australia.
April 30, 2020
Pretty much like the rest of Australia – soulless, boring and meaningless. Well, except for the beaches perhaps
December 15, 2020
Wow. You sound like you hate immigrants. For your record, there is nothing wrong with Bankstown. The one that is hostile and racist is you.
January 16, 2021
I agree with you 100% Nicole I couldn’t have said it better myself today I was in Turramurra the resident I was visiting said that Turramurra is a horrible area if you were to die no one would look at you you would rot before they discovered your body that would never happen in Bankstown your neighbours are very caring and welcoming. And that comes from the diversity of the multicultural people in Bankstown.
April 19, 2021
If it wasn’t for the Eshays then Bankstown would be mediocre
June 3, 2021
I love Bankstown. It is my preferred place to live and shop. I have never had anything but good treatment there. I always feel safe.
June 30, 2022
agressive much? you sound triggered and a tree hugging lefty poor me offense taker. Maybe contribute to the conversation
September 19, 2020
Hillsong shit?
Are the Christians committing street crime?
I don’t think so!
You must be from Cherrybrook.
January 12, 2022
Nah they are just rorting families of a percentage of their salaries, so the leader can enjoy beautiful meals and feed his 8 kids
Oh and there’s also the raping of young boys……
February 4, 2023
100% spot on
January 18, 2022
Mounty lol
November 12, 2020
U forgot St Marys lmao
May 21, 2021
I was bored by the North Shore.
June 25, 2021
Because there is no life ( boring) there is crime..
January 26, 2022
SPOT ON! And I have been told by friends that live there, that they have a serious theft problem. Even plantsfrom the front yard!
May 17, 2023
One of the principal reasons Housing Commission areas are bad is because Housing staff are corrupt and negligent and don’t enforce any standard. They love that you would find it difficult to believe but they actually target innocent law abiding tenants rather than lift a finger to investigate scams, defrauding or anti social behaviour.
September 14, 2019
Really poorly written, outdated article.
I feel sad for the residents in these suburbs.
“Rude harassment against women doing nothing inappropriate”
So if someone is being inappropriate it’s ok to harass them? Eye-roll
October 2, 2019
“So if someone is being inappropriate it’s ok to harass them? Eye-roll”
No, it means that that the harassment was unprovoked, which makes it arguably worse. If two people are having a quiet conversation [doing nothing inappropriate] and get yelled at to shut the f up, that’s worse than if they were making a massive scene in public and get yelled at to shut the f up.
There, I spelled it out for you.
January 12, 2020
I dont know all the places, but what i do know, i agree with. Doonside for eg. One day watching Youtube vids of GTA5 where the player was running around stabbing ppl. A mate walks in and says “thats not real, that doesnt happen,where does that really happen?” I replied Doonside. We all had a laugh and i swear to god, that afternoon, there was a man with a machete and had attacked someone…at Doonside.
October 2, 2019
This article reads like a pretentious old white man! Bankstown represent
January 7, 2020
yewww
March 11, 2024
REPRESENT!
January 6, 2020
This article is ridiculously biased, ill informed and frankly a load of rubbish… Perhaps statistics were used, bit I dare say personal experience was incredibly lacking.
An ignorant, disappointing review, evidently written by someone with very little cultural experience I might add. Disappointing.
April 11, 2021
Mel, the author is spot on….all of these suburbs are horseshit crapholes, overrun by bogans, wogs, and lebbos…..’cultural experience’ may be food, and getting up close and personal with the locals, it does not mean being strong armed or getting a shiv up your arse…….phhhhht……….
January 6, 2020
I was born in Bankstown. I feel safe. We have parks lit up at night, playgrounds, a cinema, Georges River picnic and boating ramps, late night shopping, bowling, go karting, skate parks, all major retailers, all fast food, outdoor restaurants that close late. I wouldn’t change coming to Bankstown for the world!
January 4, 2022
To many camel riders in Bankstown is the biggest problem even the mayor is a camel rider
January 6, 2020
Sad but true
January 12, 2020
Matt forgot to mention his suburb Kograh, with their dance studio rapist, drug lab explosions, and higher state average cocaine use. Surely that would result in at least number 6.ranking.
September 19, 2020
“higher state average cocaine use” …??
so it has some good sides to it then….
January 6, 2020
should just name them all Claymore they all go off like one
January 6, 2020
Not sure this article is any good I completely disagree with Auburn- writer need to do more research – Auburn now is home to many Nepalese migrants and you can see plenty of Nepalese people walking around station and one the street- who are fairly calm in nature!! And I go there shopping all the time and never see any cars tailgating or doing burnouts!!
I personally think Auburn is much safer than you may think
January 7, 2020
I grew up in Western Sydney so I know a lot of these areas very well. I also understand what the author means when describing the ‘feel’ of certain areas. Everyone will have different experiences and views and these will most likely depend on whether you live/d there or time spent there. Personally I agree with a lot of the comments through my own experiences witnessing significant change over the past 40 years (from when I was growing up there). Unfortunately, there is a tragic trend that hangs over the suburbs mentioned that lead them into a downward spiral.
January 7, 2020
Sorry but ur missing many places that i have known of higher crimes that u missed 🙁 like Cabramatta. Parramatta.Ermington. Mount Druitt,St Marys,rooty Hill 🙁 see yous no nothing about crimes unless u seen them and never returned back there again and yes them places u all mentioned well not so good but not the worst in them towns of high crimes 🙁
March 13, 2023
Correct it was bad in the 60s and 70s I grew up in Guildford I was a wog from 🇧🇪 belgium fight my way to school and back everyday they talk about racism now it was that bad I had indigenous mates who had my back and I had there’s half thes politisions wouldn’t have a clue weren’t even born I started high school at granville and the shit started again with the scin head gangs this generation wouldn’t have a clue all the do gooders turned up 60 years late
January 7, 2020
Well written Matt. Although claiming that a sh*thole suburbs saving grace is its food is disingenuous. A shit suburb is a shit suburb no matter what you can find to eat there. Most of the places you mentioned are ethnic hell holes populated by people whose only response to living in Australia is to rob and rort the system. The other places are populated by Australian drop kicks who seem to only exist to suck money from the government, steal, get drugged up and bash each other. Stuff em all I say. I avoid every single one of these shitbags, foreign or native, at every opportunity.
January 11, 2020
Lived in Auburn 28 years it’s ok now Lidcombe same it’s ok the problems mentioned can be in any suburb any time I am comfortable here .
January 12, 2020
I’ve lived in shalvey for yrs and yes it can be a tuff place to live at time but no matter where u live it is wat u make it if u won’t trouble u will get it whether it’s shalvey or Vaucluse I’ve never had my car stolen house broken into al my kids go to school and 2 older one are excelling in there jobs myself have worked since I was 16 as to many of other ppl in the area there are a lot of hard workers and good ppl out here maybe the author should come out and have a bbq with us al one day to get to no some
January 17, 2022
Considering the amount of spelling and grammar errors in your statement– I think the author definitely had the right assumption.
December 11, 2023
Why on earth did you choose THIS message to criticise? There are a dozen or more here who are far worse.
January 20, 2022
I absolutely hate sydney,the people here is so awful,heartless and mean inconsiderate people, especially in Merrylands and Guilford, if your looking to move to Sydney omg stay away from Merrylands,Parramatta and Guilford,the white australian woman here is absolutely awful,awful …be carefull everyone,..subburbs like castle hill or carlingford are WAYY better and safer..oxo
January 12, 2020
I believe there’s good n bad in every neighbourhood, but I know sum of those areas are know for crime,drugs n Hooker’s on the streets, I have lived in a few of those areas n I know they are way different now then , but I rather live in NSW then Melbourne right now ,that’s for sureyears ago.
September 19, 2020
Drugs and hookers on the street you say?
Where exactly is this outrage occuring and pls be specific
Asking for a friend 🙂
May 21, 2021
I am new to Blacktown. NO ONE harassesme for money or cigarettes. A house sold for over a million dollars on Peter Street recently.4 bedrooms and looks ordinary. Hoysing commission sucks.I was in it for 5 years. Got out.NRAS is a better option.It is Anti pet though in Sydney apartments they are offering.
February 8, 2020
Minto
Macquarie Park
Plumpton
Cambridge Park
St Marys
Rooty Hill
Ambarvale
Miller
are all worse. Just shit holes.
July 24, 2020
Spot on mate. They are absolute shit holes. Worked at Mt Druitt markets in the 80’s and the whole region is a cess pit of shit. Rooty Hill, Whalen and Tregear take top honours as a place of hell on earth. I sold Foxtel all over Sydney and together with Macquarie fields, these areas are enough to make you commit suicide.
July 3, 2021
Just curious, did Foxtel offer a discount to Centrelink clients or did they find it made no difference to the subscription rates ?
July 5, 2021
Trait of a naive mind
February 3, 2022
Completely disagree with Macquarie Park.
Where did you get Macquarie Park from???? It’s completely safe.
January 20, 2024
Macquarie Park ? business centre, city views, 10km from North Sydney and 10 min drive to national park ? How is this like Minto LMAO
May 12, 2020
I lived in lane cove for a bit. Near mowbray road. Loads of traffic, poor public transport options. But the worst thing was the crime. There were 4 murderers arrested over a few years. Lots of crime from the housing commission block. It’s off you think the north shore is synonymous with pymble, chatswood and killara. Lane cove is the Mount Druitt of the North shore.
September 19, 2020
Really? I’m very surprised. I didn’t know there was any housing commission there.
I thought Lane Cove was full of upscale mums sipping a nice red while watching Tarquin play junior soccer and Myfanwy have a jolly good time playing hockey?
Not to mention a snooty GPS private school there
January 30, 2023
I can confirm that Lane Cove has housing commission apartments with water views. Riverview College is definitely ‘ground zero’ for Catholic toffs – went there myself.
January 20, 2024
Lane Cove is Mount Druitt of the North Shore ? What’ are you smoking.?
Lane Cove is ranked one of the safest suburbs in NSW to live…. Research people
July 20, 2020
Glad you changed the rankings because Merrylands is definitely not the worst suburb in Sydney. But Tregear though, yeah that’s believable!
August 26, 2020
Tregear is number one aye ?? – i live near Tregear and i go there often to the small shopping area there almost daily . I have never seen any such issues and the people there are friendly . There are far more deadlier places than Tregear , the people that live in Tregear are usually poor , but they are humble and often keep to themselves and dont cause trouble. Dont judge a book by its cover until you have experienced it for yourself.
October 21, 2020
I live in Maroubra and .. uhm Im staying put 😆
November 24, 2020
blacktowns just the ghetto, and you forgot murda😂
November 27, 2020
Be nice to hear about Newcastle, the mid north coast, inland areas like Muswellbrook. Sydney is over rated.
I love in land NSW. So much diversity. Big migrant communities.
December 4, 2020
So what is Kogorah like? Good or bad area to live? Safe?
January 25, 2021
Kogarah Itself is a good area, but like so many other places in Sydney it does have its fair share of issues. I grew up in Kogarah and let me say that Familywise it is a great place to raise a family (beaches close by and the city is a steady 20 minute train ride or 25 minutes by car on a good day), but on the flip side to that as mentioned in previous comments it does have some crime going on. The aforementioned incident in a dance studio at Kogarah comes to mind as well as the assaults on young boys that occurred in the now closed and demolished Mecca Movie theatre (closed in 2003 and now it is a set of apartments). But Kogarah, and the St George area for that matter has not anywhere near the amount of notorious crimes than places such as Bondi where in the 80’s there were the notorious gay bashings which the police did a horrendous job at handling, don’t get me wrong I love Bondi but it is like any other suburb and can be susceptible to crime as well. All is all to answer your question, Kogarah is a safe place to live and a great place to raise a family.
January 21, 2021
What is a shame is that the NSW State Government keeps expanding the fringes, rather than taking a suburb of large block and deteriorating housing stock, but the potential for good transport links to Leppington (new airport), Liverpool, Penrith and Parramatta, and instituting new zone and design controls to entirely redesign streets to sell for smaller blocks of terrace style homes with courtyards and at least two parking spots, with future metro corridors currently serviced by buses, and three-five storey apartment blocks that surrounding metro stations. Like Greater London with its Underground, or the Netherlands with it’s trains and trams. Haphazard building of brick veneer mega-duplexes of some of the Western worlds worst building standards is a waste of people’s incomes, the land and resources. They could take a suburb like Merrylands close to Parra and completely redesign it with all apartments having architects and all new builds conforming to a particular design requirements for durability, liability and cohesive design…..
February 21, 2021
Where as these suburbs are mentioned nothing is mentioned that the majority of these residents are blue collar workers earning no less then $30ph,as lots of factory’s are located with in 20kms of each of these shit-tips.Also these high wages indicate the no brainer ability of being able to funds to pay high rents.
Liverpool will explode in value in the next 10 years with the fast approaching new International Airport to be completed by 2026.
The advantage of this will be Owners around Liverpool and closer to the new Billion dollar Airport will be clearly asking for a princely sum on the property.
To the math,Kingsford Smith Airport next to the Suburbs with old houses (With no garages) and endless traffic,compared to Liverpool,new housing estates such as Leppington with a 19km drive to a new Airport,and the other ability of working from home as COVID has put this into perspective.
So goodnight M5.
Remember the age old rule,While the scum moves away as of higher rents,bricks & mortar stand the rest of time.
Thanks
March 5, 2021
Would be easier if we just spread out the Housing Commission into rural areas of Australia and gentrify these decapitated areas. It will make more people move into these areas at the same time as reduce house prices and we have the added benefit of keeping out the less desirables from the Sydney. If they do not work, why do they need to live in the city? they may as well move rural and spend the dole there.
March 17, 2021
I know each suburb has good and bad as I lived all over Sydney, All it takes is just the majority to any suburb to make it have a good or bad outlook, As everyone has their own opinion of where they have lived and been raised will only see there suburb for what it actually is, I am not sure where this person got their information from, Or Whether they have even lived in every suburb within Sydney, Maybe back then in their time this is how it was, Just remember each suburb is changing so on that note People from all walks of life will have to accept the good, the ugly, in their own backyard and can try to make the transition to live in a better suburb or just move altogether outside of Sydney, Still yet life goes on.
March 18, 2021
Was beaten, raped and chased by cars at multiple different times in Campsie. The gangster mentality of the young guys there is disgusting. The older folks don’t know how to smile. There seemed a lot of racial tension between the communities within. Everywhere west of Campsie on the south side was scary to me as a small female with visible tattoos. I only went as far west as Blacktown after I was bailed up getting off the train there.
May 21, 2021
Campsie these days is an asian St Marys..
April 8, 2024
Rob making uneducated stupid remarks like campsie is an Asian stmarys proves you have never been there. Nothing like st Mary’s at all. I am third generation ozzie having lived in Campsie all my life. Local council coukd invest more money sprussing up the suburb but all councils are guilty of this. Great location to city. Housing is costly granted. Area is very clean. Amenities are in abundance. How this us compared to st Mary’s is laughable. Perhaps your a comedian by trade? Lol
September 25, 2021
I’m so sorry that happened to you. I hope you’re ok.
April 8, 2024
Well Ashley I dont know what Campsie suburb your referring to maybe the Campsie in Gaza or Palestine? Cause the Campsie I lived in was a communal hard working suburb with various ethnic races of all religions whose children eventually assimilate and become ozzies. Very very minor issues with crime and violence no more than any other suburb in Sydney and definitely not in the top 20 of bad suburbs to live in. I think your opinion is clouded because something very bad happened to you which us tragic. But similar things have happened in the Vatican……yes the Vatican and we dont see articles denoting Vatican city as a bad place to reside. Lol
March 19, 2021
That is the biggest load of elitist nonsense i have ever wasted time reading…. Seems to me the assumption here is low socio-economic = dangerous. Actually quite disgusted.
December 5, 2021
Well said, Jo Ross! Agree 100%. These types of smug, sanctimonious and elitist reports shame us all. They achieve NOTHING but divide our nation and bring out the worst in hateful racists (see the awful response by William below).
May 21, 2021
This is hands down 100% factual.
I grew up in Blacktown – i know most places between there and Penrith.
Weird thing is – castle hill is the new Blacktown… Kellyville has loads of petty street crime as well
I used to walk from kellyville to south blacktown after work often At night ( 3 and a bit hours btw). Cops would pull me up all the time around Kellyville – i used to walk down memorial avenue and sunny holt. I felt safer there than kellyville.
May 9, 2022
Totally agree with Rob.
I livedin Castle Hill for 6 months a year ago and it’s full of tossers driving around as fast as they can in their little hotted up cars, making as much noise as possible.
McDonald’s , “Towers” shopping centre and “Castle Hill Tavern” seem to be the preferred cultural experiences.
Most of the problem is because of the overdeveloped around the Metro. Beautiful older garden blocks being flogged and demolished by developers.
May 23, 2021
You guys forgot Whalan and Mt Druitt
May 24, 2021
As someone not from Australia, street viewing through all of these neighborhoods, all I can think is “wow, if these are your worst places, damn, you must have it good”. All these places look perfectly fine and I just cant believe they are “crime ridden hellholes”. Please don’t forget you live in paradise compared to most of the world.
June 25, 2021
It’s crime in paradise mate. Just because it looks like paradise doesn’t mean the lifestyle in these suburbs fit the word. Housing commission is the problem.
July 5, 2021
Thats the problem – its no different to the rest of the world thesedays. thanks to our nation opening the floodgates on immigration from shithole regions such as africa, the middle east, the subcontinent & south east asia… as well the pacific islands, & the fact is simply that most of sydney is unlivable to those well versed in a civilised way of life. heck, our nation had its first slavery case just this month thanks to a indian couple who now call Australia home. Australia has been on the downhill since the 90’s, thats a fact.
December 5, 2021
WOW William, what an absolutely disgraceful, appalling racist you are! Did you know that YOUR smug life could change in a nano second and YOU and your family could end up disadvantaged. Your vindictive, reprehensible and hateful comments expose you as the typical type of shallow, callously inhumane xenophobic racist who cheer on the LNP. Shame on you!
December 24, 2023
To be fair to William, i’m an immigrant/refugee in Sydney and unfortunately while many immigrants are lovely people, there are a few too many that give the rest of us a bad name. Sadly some refuse to assimilate or take up the opportunities given to them, with higher crime rates and youth behaving badly in suburbs with a higher concentration of immigrants. I see it with my own eyes because I live in one of these areas and its frustrating to see
July 18, 2022
Usually, I’m an advocate of limiting immigration and refugees but having read your elitist, racist and uninformed opinion, I can’t help but feel that you and those like you are a contributing factor to all that’s wrong in this country. Australia IS on the downhill but ‘civilised’ Australians are so lazy that it’s easier to whine than actually attempt to do anything about the problem and that’s coming from a home grown Aussie, a criminal descendant if you will. You do realise Australia was built on the back of criminals so why you have this ‘better than anyone else’ attitude is simply ridiculous, unless ofcourse your aren’t a descendant but rather a ‘ring in’ yourself.
September 25, 2021
Yes. Thank you.
October 19, 2021
Yeah and some of the most expensive suburbs Australian cities look like inner city ghettos. Cos they used to be the shitholes now they’re trendy n expensive . So now the outer suburbs with reasonable looking housing are the cheaper suburbs . It’s not the houses it’s the ppl in em that makes it good or bad area
July 27, 2022
Vaucluse does not. It is so beautiful, that now, living in suburbia, albeit more towards the Asquith area, I miss it. I spent some years in the Eastern suburbs, however bought where I am as I can’t afford the four limbs and the vital organs price range, it would have cost to buy there.
July 12, 2021
Although it has a wry satirical bent the commentary the article does highlight an uncomfortable truism that the mix of low socio economic conditions, isolation of ethic communities & lack of education result in savage increases in crime, drug use, mental health issues etc etc…. It may not be PC & it in no way makes the people who live in these suburbs “lesser” people but circumstances have a way of moulding any person.
July 29, 2021
Yes, wonderful descriptions and colourful adjectives! Kudos to Matt who’s probably done his research, and yet never spent time actually residing there. I don’t doubt there are occasional drunks, druggies, and long-term unemployed youth haunting those aforementioned suburbs, but you’d be surprised at the ‘quiet achievers’ who toil away in hidden back rooms.
I lived near Cabramatta for 30 years and never had to dodge a bullet – only a naked butthole, whizzing past my nose outside a car window.
Let me see now – ah yes – I went to school via Fairfield everyday for six consecutive years and never saw a pulled knife. Lots of chewing gum, mullets, smokes and lively chatter at the train station.
And don’t get me started about Liverpool/Warwick Farm or Blacktown! I witnessed low-life hurling abuse at each
other and the odd sly beggar asking for a
quid – both on and off train carriages.
Quite curiously, the worst observable resident behaviour over a period of 12 years has been in Campbelltown – hands down, second to none – this joint takes the Olympic trophy of Main Street drama and hooliganism. There are creatures from the deep who are tattooed from head-to-toe, have weird body piercings with tufts of hair and clothes in peculiar places and quantities. And they’re all missing eardrums because every syllable is screamed at high decibel across intersections, train stations and the main drag. I witnessed two clan members screaming at each other, nose-to-nose, with veins popping out of their necks just before one king-hit the other with his skull – rendering an immediate ‘knock out’ to the ground. The pleasantly drinking Aboriginals looked up to see the din, while the colourful victim finally woke up from the concussion, staggered to his feet and walked off in an undignified huff. The dinners at Subway got free entertainment over lunch – after a late night of listening to a domestic violence case ‘going off like a rocket’ at 2 am – with the echo of screaming, bashing and expletives.
So yes, petty crime is relatively common, but I think serious crime happens more frequently at night in the privacy of any darkened streets, any homes or alleyways when deals or lives go right off the boil…
September 20, 2021
I grew up in Kingswood (last lived there 8 months ago) and have some funny stories regarding junkies with machetes and syringes scaring you on the walk to school but it’s easy to stay outta trouble. You won’t get robbed in no park if you dress getho and broke. And all the gun violence is targeting drug dealers, the only people who really getting robbed are Uni students who have all this fancy shit their parents bought em. It’s just paying tax to the locals
October 10, 2021
live in tregear 4 years .have no seen and heard any serious violence or petty crime .why single out tregear. lots of retired gentle senior folks and decent migrants live here and called it homes for a reason too. i personally encountered more harrassment living in city and east coast (bondi) in short period of time.
December 5, 2021
I don’t live in any of the suburbs mentioned above but even I am shocked at the level of elitism and racism expressed in this rather misinformed and sanctimonious description of the above inner-west and south-western areas of Sydney! The first thing I noticed was the author’s constant condescending and inhumane referral to “housing commission” or “ government subsidised” homes! Let me remind Matt-S that IT IS MOT A CRIME to be struggling or disadvantaged in this egalitarian country of ours!
The author really does sound like one of those pompous, arrogant and contemptuous right-wing supporters of the racist Morrison/Dutton regime who believe that anyone who is not white, Anglo Saxon or Pentecostal is somehow inferior! WTF … that is NOT who we Australians aspire to be! Citizens who are poor, struggling or, in some way, disadvantaged and/or vulnerable deserve a HELPING HAND and NOT being slapped down or having the suburbs where they live being condemned, ridiculed and criticised by smugly superior, arrogant and biased “reviews” that will permanently and unfairly besmirch whole communities!
Shame on you, Matt-S! Sydney is a big, bustling, lively city that has a very proud reputation as one of the most successful multicultural cities in the world – these type of shallow reports, shamelessly denigrating a selection of less affluent suburbs in our city, are extremely damaging and negatively effect us ALL! Most Sydneysiders pride ourselves on our friendly, welcoming nature to immigrants from all over the world – and that INCLUDES desperate asylum seekers who have become displaced and/or are escaping countries completely destroyed by the wars political psychopaths like John Howard (and his notorious friend, George W Bush) helped to create!
The comments about the above suburbs above are about as shallow as a car park puddle. The reputation of hundreds of suburbs in Sydney can rise or fall on a pin head! I have travelled throughout the world extensively and can assure readers that, compared to some towns in America and elsewhere around the world, ANYWHERE in Sydney is widely regarded as a safe environment to in which to raise children, providing outstanding State-run education and a high standard of living. Unlike the privileged elitists and right-wing extremists in the LNP, our Labor Opposition Leader, Anthony Albanese, was raised by a struggling single mother in the 1960’s in an area regarded as “disadvantaged” and rose to the helm of the ALP. This symbolises that Australians, no matter where they are from, in what suburb they live or from what ethnic background, have the egalitarian right and potential to be whatever they want to be!
A PERSON’S POSTCODE SHOULD NEVER DEFINE THEM! It is unfair, inhumane and un-Australian!
January 20, 2024
Hi Kathryn
I was raised I. Housing commission partly and one side of my family migrated here from Europe and lived out back of Edmondson park. I’ve lived and worked I. Campbelltown, Liverpool. North Shore, Eastern Beaches, Inner West, the list goes on. I can assure you I wasn’t offended in any way or find the suburb safety review racist. I speak from adequate experience and an impartial view point.
March 17, 2022
2200 brother
March 25, 2022
Waterloo housing estate is an eye sore. It is depressing. It is rife with brain dead desperate junkies, drunkards, opportunist thieves, people who continually make a mess of bin stations, leave used drug paraphernalia in bin stations and on the streets, leave bottles and break bottles on the street and gardens, they treat the whole place as a bin, damage property, trespass through properties. They’re disgusting and disgraceful people who have no respect for themselves or other good tenants. Housing should kick them out to the street. They don’t deserve a place. They wreck it for decent people.
May 24, 2022
It’s important to note that there is different types of crime happening in different suburbs, Some areas experience high sexual assaults, while others it is theft as the main crime. There is no suburb is Sydney that does not experience crime, and there is no guarantee that you’ll not be a victim of crime. The rule I follow is that the cheaper the housing rent is in an area, then that equals higher crime in that area. So moral of the story is if you’re not sure where to live, then look at the rental prices in certain suburbs and that will give you an indication if a suburb is “safe” or not compared to other suburbs in Sydney.
July 28, 2022
Since this article had been written during covid times I don’t think much has changed since then.
I live in Kingswood.
I’m tired of drug addicted junkies causing a disturbance for the rest of the community who has to put up with their continuous commotion until either they end up dead or taken to prison.
It’s NSW health helping to facilitate their injecting equipment so they can just toss their used syringes wherever they feel like it.
Once someone tired to break into my place one morning. They ended up running away. Lucky I had been home that day.
September 20, 2022
Looks like you forgot to add Campsie and Lakemba to the list.
From all the comments, it looks like, some areas from the list are liveable but one would notice things common to high crimes like hooning, petty thefts, outlaws, druggies etc.
Is it the housing commission, refugees/asylum, or even established second generation migrants like lebos or arabs that might want to create an environment common to their origin countries?
But one thing is sure, people are moving away from Sydney. They say it is hard to make friends, it is unaffordable and have high commute time and crime rate.
September 27, 2023
Campsie ain’t so bad. As someone who grew up in the bucolic south coast, then lived on the lower north shore and south Sydney (redfern/chippendale) for 15y before moving to Campsie
I see the good in this place. 150k cheaper for an apartment than burwood and Canterbury, cheap food, like 10 pharmacies, transport. The metro will go through by 2025 and that’s a huge bonus.
The main recommendation is to just stay the hell away from the Woolies – its very bad vibes – much nicer going to Aldi in Canterbury or Coles in Clemton Park.
I’ve walked home many times from the train or bus in the dark alone and not been mugged yet or harassed. Yeah theres super sketchy drug dependent people milling about but I used to work in AOD sector so I can pick them a mile away (they all have the same abnormal gait). I just blend in by wearing a big w tracksuit and only paying in cash for everything like all the poors here!
March 19, 2024
And I thought Auckland had problems? – compared to Sydney it’s a paradise.