Sales Trends Rose Bay

Sales Analysis

Latest sales data and trends for Rose Bay 2030. Interact and download sales data and trends for 7,285 transactions focused on activity, growth and resale value. Now includes a rental market analysis of 1,907 leases (active rental bonds) for Rose Bay — median weekly rent, year-on-year movement and bond activity.

Updated June 9, 2026 7,285 Transactions 1,907 Active Leases

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id Address Suburb Sale Price Sale Date Type

Download the Latest 100 Sales

Click the button to download the most recent sales data in CSV format.


SOURCE: NSW Valuer General transactions analysed by AreaSearch
Last updated:

Pricing & Volume Trends How Rose Bay has tracked over time

Avatar Pricing and Volume Trends - Rose Bay, 2030

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Download the sale trends

Click the button to download the annual sales trends in CSV format.

Rental Market Q4 2025 data

What it costs to rent in Rose Bay

Median weekly rents, year-on-year movement and bond-lodgement activity for Rose Bay (2030). Sourced from the NSW Rental Bond Board, DCJ Family & Community Services.

Median rent

$1,050

per week · Q4 2025

YoY change

+23.5%

vs same quarter last year

Active bonds

≈1,907

est. · currently held

New bonds

≈154

est. · this quarter

Latest Quarter Breakdown · Q4 2025
Dwelling Bedrooms Median $/wk Active bonds New bonds (Qtr) YoY Quality
Download Quarterly Rental History

Full quarterly bond data for this area — median rent, bond counts, and YoY change by dwelling type and bedroom count. CSV format, ready for spreadsheets.

SOURCE: NSW Rental Bond Board (DCJ Family & Community Services), processed by AreaSearch. Imputed values are flagged. Latest publication:

Sales Trends FAQ

SOURCE: NSW Valuer General transactions analysed by AreaSearch
Last updated:

Rental Market FAQ
How many leases does this rental analysis cover?
This rental market view is built from an analysis of 1,907 leases — the active rental bonds held across Rose Bay as at Q4 2025. Every lodged bond represents one current tenancy, while the “new bonds” figures count fresh leases signed in the quarter.
Where does the rental data come from?
The NSW Rental Bond Board (Department of Communities & Justice). A bond must be lodged for virtually every residential tenancy in NSW, so this is the most complete rental dataset available — far broader and less biased than advertised-listing samples.
Why is rental data sometimes shown for the postcode rather than the suburb?
The Bond Board only reports suburb-level figures where the bond count is high enough to be statistically reliable. For smaller suburbs it reports at postcode level instead. When that happens, a note appears directly above the rental KPIs telling you exactly which area is being shown.
How does Rose Bay compare to the wider council area?
Choose “Suburb vs Postcode vs LGA (trend)” from the View dropdown in the rental section. It overlays median weekly rent for the suburb, its postcode and the Woollahra local government area — so you can see whether local rents are running ahead of, or behind, the broader market.
What is the difference between the Quarterly and Rolling year figures?
Quarterly shows the median for that single quarter — most current, but choppier. Rolling year averages the trailing four quarters — smoother, and better for reading the underlying trend. Switch between them with the toggle at the top of the rental section.
What does year-on-year (YoY) rent growth mean?
It compares the latest quarter’s median rent to the same quarter twelve months earlier. The Bond Board publishes YoY with a one-quarter lag, so for the most recent quarter AreaSearch computes it from the prior-year median (shown with a dotted underline in the breakdown table).

SOURCE: NSW Rental Bond Board (DCJ / Department of Communities & Justice), processed by AreaSearch. Latest publication: 2026-05-30.

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