The “other side” of Sydney Harbour may not be as densely packed with suburbs, attractions or businesses as their brothers to the south, yet this is a part of Sydney that generally offers a high-end quality of life. Dotted with suburbs that range from concentrated centres of shopping and business to secluded, leafy hubs populated by impressive mansions, the North Shore is largely a wealthy part of Sydney that gives opportunities at more personal space and additional greenery.
Most choose it as a place to live to have access to Sydney city with less of the bustle, yet it’s continually growing and being expanded in and of itself. Major modern working hubs such as Macquarie Park, hotspots for shopping like Chatswood and Ryde, and business focal points like North Sydney coexist side-by-side with highly family-friendly slices of suburbia.
The North Shore is typically far from cheap, however – there’s a price that comes with high-end living in one of the world’s most expensive global cities.
Check out our Sydney North Shore suburb reviews below for more information on each suburb.
North Shore Suburbs
Summary: Sydney’s north shore base for a lot of tech and other big-business, Macquarie Park mixes modern urban planning with a reasonably central location. It’s the focal point for many daily commuters – both workers and students alike – and has seen near-constant redevelopment over the past few years. Everything here feels very modern and well-kept, and its recent shopping and public transport additions are a plus, yet its traffic issues and lack of character make it feel a little sterile. It can be good value for apartment-dwellers, however. Read Review
Summary: Large enough to almost be considered a self-contained town at this point, Hornsby is one of the most complete suburbs in Sydney when it comes to amenities. It’s lacking absolutely nothing in terms of services and shopping – both big and small-scale – and brings with it solid public transport connectivity too. A huge array of parks, playgrounds, schools and childcare add to this to make it perhaps the most family-friendly suburb in Sydney at good value to boot. Its only real negatives are distance, and a lack of nightlife. Read Review
Summary: A key transportation hub on the North Shore, Epping is both well located and connected for accessing other key urban centres nearby. The suburb features many larger, heritage-listed homes sprawling out from a small, concentrated shopping district around its station with back streets that are highly leafy and dotted with numerous parks. It’s eminently pet and family friendly, however the combination of traffic issues and price are both factors to consider when living here. Read Review
Summary: An incredibly well-equipped suburb in terms of amenities, shopping and services, Ryde on the North Shore is a true “hub” that’s central to almost everything – except the Sydney CBD. While as-the-crow-flies the city isn’t too far away, some traffic issues and the lack of a dedicated train station hurt the suburb somewhat; however its extensive variety in both homes and services as well as proximity to popular non-CBD work hotspots make Ryde far more self-sufficient (and enticing) than many other busy suburbs in Sydney. Read Review
Summary: A land of long driveways, immaculately-kept gardens, and sprawling grand homes, Killara on the North Shore is an impressive concentration of greenery-draped wealth. Freestanding houses here rank among the upper tier of northern Sydney, however there’s enough of a selection of modern apartments to keep things viable for others at earlier stages of life. It’s leafy, it’s safe, it’s quiet, and it’s not too far a commute from the CBD – as long as you’re happy with not much to do at all in your own backyard, and willing to fork out some cash. Read Review
Summary: A high-end, green and peaceful slice of suburbia, Lindfield’s popularity has grown in recent years with additional modern developments helping to round out what is overall a grand old suburb. It’s highly leafy, clean and visually appealing while still having city connectivity courtesy of its rail line.
It’s also almost utterly lacking in activities and things to see and do, while its large and often impressive housing blocks carry with them prohibitively high purchase prices out of reach for many. Read Review