AU Sydney — a mover's brief

What Sydney actually looks, feels, and costs like for someone considering moving. Neighbourhoods, climate, transport, healthcare, safety, and the practical scaffolding — every figure sourced.

Country
Australia
Oceania
Population
5,450,496
metro · 2024
Area
12,368 km²
Elevation
19 m
city centre
Time zone
Australia/Sydney
Currency
AUD
Airport
SYD · Sydney Kingsford Smith Airport
Metro
1 metro line · tram network
Walkability
●●●●○
editorial score · 1–5
Bike friendliness
●●●○○
editorial score · 1–5
Primary language
English official; one of the most linguistically diverse metros in the OECD — over 35% of residents speak a language other than English at home, but English fluency is near-universal in professional contexts.

Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics ↗ · verified 2026-04-22

Overview

Overview

Sydney is a city of 5,450,496 people in Australia (Oceania). It is one of Australia's largest urban centres. The main international airport is SYD (Sydney Kingsford Smith Airport). The metro system has 1 line, alongside a tram network.

A one-bedroom city-centre apartment runs approximately A$2,850 (approximately €1,710) per month. Monthly groceries for one person run approximately A$495. A monthly public-transport pass costs A$220. Across the 100 cities Meridian tracks, Sydney ranks 84th overall on combined monthly essentials — among the more expensive.

Sydney's climate is mediterranean — January is typically the warmest month with average highs around 27°C, while July is the coldest with average lows near 8°C. Annual rainfall totals approximately 1167mm, wettest in March.

Cost of living

Cost of living

Total monthly essentials: approximately €2,289/month EUR-equivalent for a single person in a 1-bedroom flat (rent + utilities + groceries + transit). District and lifestyle swing this 30–50% either way.
ItemMonthly / item costSource
1-bedroom flat, city centre A$2,850/mo ≈ €1,710 Domain Q4 2024 Sydney CBD + inner ↗
Rent per square metre A$42.00/m² ≈ €25 Domain Q4 2024 rental report ↗
Utilities (85m² flat) A$250/mo ≈ €150 AER + energy retailers + water 2025 ↗
Public transport pass A$220/mo ≈ €132 Opal adult weekly-cap approximation monthly ↗
Groceries, one person A$495/mo ≈ €297 ABS 2025 household expenditure basket ↗
Restaurant meal, average A$28 ≈ €17 Sydney mid-range dining ↗
How this city ranks

How this city ranks

Cost of living rank
84 / 100
most expensive quintile · across tracked cities
Within Australia
5 / 5
cheapest-to-most-expensive
Within Oceania
10 / 10
regional cost ranking
Composite cost (EUR)
€2,289/mo
rent + utilities + food + transit

See the full rankings: Cheapest cities · Most expensive · Broadband ranking

Climate

Climate

Monthly normals — high · low (°C)
Annual: 22.5° / 14.1° · 1167mm rainfall
Jan 27° 19° Feb 27° 20° Mar 25° 18° Apr 23° 15° May 20° 12° Jun 17° 10° Jul 17° Aug 19° Sep 21° 11° Oct 23° 13° Nov 25° 16° Dec 26° 18°
Monthly rainfall (mm)
104 118 132 97 99 131 98 82 68 77 83 78

Hottest month typically Jan, coldest Jul. Values are station normals — actual weather varies year-to-year. Source: Bureau of Meteorology (1991–2020 normals) ↗

Country context

Country context

Visa policy, taxation, healthcare, and broadband infrastructure are national rather than city-level — the numbers below are Australia-wide context for someone weighing Sydney specifically. Each links through to the full country brief.

Top income tax (national)
45%
applies to Australia residents
Health spending
10.4% of GDP
Australia · 2023
Life expectancy
83.1 yrs
at birth, Australia
Broadband penetration
36.5/100
national average
Visa routes tracked
4
to enter Australia

Full Australia country brief →

Recent policy changes

Recent policy changes

Policy changes apply nationally to Australia and therefore affect Sydney. The three most recent:

In force 29 Nov 2025
In force Visa & immigration

Migration Amendment (Skilled Visa Reform Technical Measures) Regulations 2025

Effective 29 November 2025, technical amendments to the Migration Regulations 1994 aligned the operational mechanics of the Skills in Demand visa — extending the Minister's power to cancel SID visas where sponsorship obligations are breached, updating sponsored-person definitions under labour agreements, clarifying employer-sponsor obligation termination circumstances, and ensuring overseas SID refusals are reviewable.

Who it affects: Technical compliance for SID 482 sponsors and applicants.

Parliament of Australia ↗ · Department of Home Affairs (Australia) ↗ · verified 2026-04-19

In force 1 Jul 2025
In force Visa & immigration

Core Skills Income Threshold indexed to AUD 73,150 for 2025-26

The Core Skills Income Threshold rose to AUD 73,150/year for 2025-26 (indexed from AUD 70,000 initial) — an approximately 4.5% uplift. Specialist Skills threshold (AUD 135,000+) remains unchanged. Annual indexation is now the established pattern under the SID framework.

Who it affects: SID Core Skills applicants sponsored from 1 July 2025.

Department of Home Affairs (Australia) ↗ · verified 2026-04-19

In force 7 Dec 2024
In force Visa & immigration

Core Skills Occupation List replaces legacy skilled lists

The Core Skills Occupation List (CSOL) — maintained by Jobs and Skills Australia — replaced the multiple legacy occupation lists (MLTSSL, STSOL, ROL) for SID Core Skills purposes. CSOL is designed to respond dynamically to labour-market-shortage indicators. Jobs and Skills Australia publishes updates at least annually; reconfirm before lodging.

Who it affects: Employers and applicants navigating the SID Core Skills stream.

Jobs and Skills Australia ↗ · Department of Home Affairs (Australia) ↗ · verified 2026-04-19

Full Australia changes feed →

Compare and explore

Compare and explore

Sydney against other places Meridian tracks — at country level for full economic / visa / tax context, or city-level for cost-of-living.

Country comparisons including Australia

Other cities in Australia

Frequently asked

Frequently asked

How much does it cost to live in Sydney?
A one-bedroom apartment in central Sydney rents for around A$2,850 (approximately €1,710) per month. Combined monthly essentials (rent + utilities + groceries + transit) total approximately €2,289 EUR-equivalent. Individual spend varies 30–50% by district and lifestyle.
Is Sydney expensive compared to other global cities?
Sydney ranks 84th out of 100 cities Meridian tracks for combined monthly living costs — among the most expensive quartile, and 5th of 5 within Australia. Rankings use EUR-normalised rent + utilities + groceries + transit.
What's the weather like in Sydney?
Sydney sees average summer highs of 27°C in January and winter lows of 8°C in July. Annual rainfall totals about 1167mm. Full monthly breakdown in the Climate section above.
What visa do I need to move to Sydney?
Sydney's visa regime is set at the national level — Australia tracks 4 residence-permit routes including Skills in Demand — Core Skills (Subclass 482), Skills in Demand — Specialist Skills (Subclass 482), Skilled Independent (Subclass 189), among others. See the Australia country brief for full eligibility, salary thresholds, and processing times.
How do you get around in Sydney?
Sydney has 1 metro line plus an extensive tram network; the city centre is highly walkable (Meridian editorial score 4/5). Monthly transit pass cost is in the breakdown above.
What language is spoken in Sydney?
English official; one of the most linguistically diverse metros in the OECD — over 35% of residents speak a language other than English at home, but English fluency is near-universal in professional contexts.
What is the main airport for Sydney?
Sydney's primary international airport is SYD (Sydney Kingsford Smith Airport).

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