This page now starts with the practical questions ordinary users ask first: is the suburb expensive, what does rent look like, how big is it, what is nearby, and what should you do next.
Jenolan is in Oberon LGA, NSW, postcode 2790, with population 36.
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The page is still useful for local context, but the evidence stack is too thin for a clean one-page call. Use nearby stronger suburbs or compare mode before treating it as a serious shortlist decision.
The local employment base leans toward arts & recreation and manufacturing. Local earnings momentum is not available from the linked ATO series. NSW employment is up +0.3% year-on-year (+14K jobs) and +11.3% over five years in the official NERO dataset. Read this as a broader state jobs backdrop combined with local employment mix, not a suburb-only new-jobs count.
NSW has 37 Commonwealth-backed major projects under construction, 5 underway, and 75 in planning as at 2024-10-02. There is no matched local transport-stop count here, so read the infrastructure backdrop as broader state delivery context only. Read this as a state delivery backdrop, not a suburb-specific project list.
Jenolan is a quiet locality in New South Wales within the Oberon local government area (postcode 2790). With a population of 36, the suburb has an established demographic with a median age of 40. Households earn a median income of $108K per year, with an average household size of 2.1 people. NSW employment has moved +0.3% year-on-year in the official Jobs and Skills Australia NERO series, which provides the broader jobs backdrop for this suburb. NSW also had 37 Commonwealth-backed major projects under construction, 5 underway, and 75 in planning as at 2 October 2024, which is useful as a broader delivery backdrop rather than a suburb-specific project count. The most common occupations are managers, community & personal service, labourers. Employment in the area leans toward arts & recreation and manufacturing. The top ancestries reported are Australian, English, Irish.
This suburb mixes release datasets, Census data, and matched local services. Use the data status block before treating every metric as equally fresh.
QuickProperty mixes release files, Census baselines, and matched local services on this page. Read the status panel before treating every metric as equally fresh.
Manual release files parsed into suburb prices
Use current rent as a starting signal, not as a fixed underwriting truth.
Schools, transport, and hospitals are useful as presence signals, but they still have different source cadences.
Direct signals include Property prices, Market rent, and Crime. Treat Schools, Hospitals, and Transport as the main gap before this becomes a stronger decision page.
Use compare before shortlisting so the missing evidence is balanced against nearby suburbs.
Property prices, Market rent, Crime
No fallback or lower-precision signals flagged.
Schools, Hospitals, Transport, Population growth
Gross yield screens at about 15.6%. Entry price sits in the lower-cost range for a first-pass screen. The page is thin enough that nearby alternatives should be checked before shortlisting. Small local population makes the signal set more fragile.
Use stronger nearby reads or rankings before treating this suburb as a shortlist candidate.
Gross yield screens at about 15.6%. Entry price sits in the lower-cost range for a first-pass screen.
The page is thin enough that nearby alternatives should be checked before shortlisting. Small local population makes the signal set more fragile.
Schools, Transport
Use as context
This page stays indexable because Jenolan is a real locality with enough context to be directionally useful. The tradeoff is that coverage is lighter than a stronger suburb profile, so the read should stay cautious.
Small-population localities can still be worth checking, but rankings, comparisons, and broad suburb assumptions become noisier faster.
The main gaps on this page are school matches, hospital coverage, transport stops, population trend data, and building approvals. That narrows how much confidence you should place on a single-page read.
Start here for context, then open compare, the state hub, or larger nearby suburbs before treating this as a complete market decision.
This page remains visible, but it should be read as a locality brief rather than a full-confidence suburb profile.
This page is useful for direction-setting, not closure. Use it to frame the locality, then confirm the story with compare, stronger nearby suburbs, and the state hub.
If Jenolan feels too thin on its own, use these nearby suburbs as stronger local reads before making a shortlist decision.
pop same · house +$120K · rent -$220/wk
Similar local read: useful for context, but still compare the actual market signals.
pop same · house +$128.8K · rent -$275/wk
Similar local read: useful for context, but still compare the actual market signals.
The detailed view stays here for deeper inspection. If you want the complete charts, profile tables, data-status panel, and related suburb browsing, this is still the advanced mode.
Jenolan is a quiet locality in New South Wales within the Oberon local government area (postcode 2790). With a population of 36, the suburb has an established demographic with a median age of 40. Households earn a median income of $108K per year, with an average household size of 2.1 people. NSW employment has moved +0.3% year-on-year in the official Jobs and Skills Australia NERO series, which provides the broader jobs backdrop for this suburb. NSW also had 37 Commonwealth-backed major projects under construction, 5 underway, and 75 in planning as at 2 October 2024, which is useful as a broader delivery backdrop rather than a suburb-specific project count. The most common occupations are managers, community & personal service, labourers. Employment in the area leans toward arts & recreation and manufacturing. The top ancestries reported are Australian, English, Irish.
The median house price in Jenolan is $150,000, having dropped significantly 85.7% over the past year. The current median weekly rent is $450. This gives a gross rental yield of approximately 15.6%. The median monthly mortgage repayment is $800.
The crime rate in the Oberon LGA is low at 1,856 incidents per 100,000 population.
From an investment perspective, Jenolan offers a gross rental yield of 15.6%, rated as high yield. Property prices sit below the state median ($150K/$1.5M), suggesting a potential value opportunity. The price-to-income ratio of 1.4x is considered affordable. House prices have moved -85.7% year-on-year.
Jenolan is a quiet locality in New South Wales within the Oberon local government area (postcode 2790). With a population of 36, the suburb has an established demographic with a median age of 40. Households earn a median income of $108K per year, with an average household size of 2.1 people. NSW employment has moved +0.3% year-on-year in the official Jobs and Skills Australia NERO series, which provides the broader jobs backdrop for this suburb. NSW also had 37 Commonwealth-backed major projects under construction, 5 underway, and 75 in planning as at 2 October 2024, which is useful as a broader delivery backdrop rather than a suburb-specific project count. The most common occupations are managers, community & personal service, labourers. Employment in the area leans toward arts & recreation and manufacturing. The top ancestries reported are Australian, English, Irish.
The median house price in Jenolan is $150,000, having dropped significantly 85.7% over the past year. The current median weekly rent is $450. This gives a gross rental yield of approximately 15.6%. The median monthly mortgage repayment is $800.
The crime rate in the Oberon LGA is low at 1,856 incidents per 100,000 population.
From an investment perspective, Jenolan offers a gross rental yield of 15.6%, rated as high yield. Property prices sit below the state median ($150K/$1.5M), suggesting a potential value opportunity. The price-to-income ratio of 1.4x is considered affordable. House prices have moved -85.7% year-on-year.