StreetScout

Jaunter, NSW

By Lauren McCaleb · Reviewed by Dylan Duncan ·

70/100
Suburb Score

More advantaged than the national average

Jaunter is more socio-economically advantaged than about 70% of the 14,462 Australian suburbs we score, based on the ABS SEIFA index (raw score 1023, where about 1000 is the national average).

A socio-economic measure from ABS Census data — not a measure of how good a suburb is to live in or visit. How we calculate this.

Is Jaunter a good place to live?

There’s no single answer — it depends on what matters to you. So instead of one mystery number, we break it down: a transparent score on each part of life we can back with public data, and an honest “not yet” on the parts we can’t.

70/100
Livability

Strong on the data we score

A weighted blend of the 1 component we can score for Jaunter from public data. It sits alongside — and reconciles with — the socio-economic Suburb Score above; it is a transparent read, not a complete verdict.

Socio-economic advantage

70/100

More advantaged than the national average

More advantaged than the national average — the same ABS SEIFA-based Suburb Score (70/100) shown above. Income, education and occupation, as published by the ABS. · ABS SEIFA 2021

Not yet scored

We’d rather leave these open than publish a number we can’t stand behind. Here’s where each one stands.

  • Housing affordabilityNot scored — no ABS Census median-rent figure for this suburb.
  • Amenities & accessNot scored yet — our OpenStreetMap amenity mapping is still rolling out across suburbs.
  • Green spaceNot scored yet — our OpenStreetMap green-space mapping is still rolling out across suburbs.
  • TransportNot scored yet — our OpenStreetMap public-transport mapping is still rolling out across suburbs.
  • SchoolsNot scored yet — school performance (ACARA / ICSEA) needs a data-reuse licence cleared before we can publish it.
  • SafetyNot scored yet — Australia has no single open crime dataset and safety data carries defamation and legal care, so it is gated pending a go/no-go and will be data-only when added.
  • CommunityNot scored yet — we won't reduce community to a number from a proxy. We'd rather leave it open than publish an invented value judgement.

A transparent read on public data, not a verdict — and not a measure of any person or community. See our methodology for how each component is worked out and why some aren’t scored yet.

Jaunter at a glance

Population (2021)
11
Median age
34
Median weekly household income
$537
SEIFA score
1023
Local government area
Oberon
Coordinates
-33.9858, 149.9148

Map of Jaunter

© OpenStreetMap contributors · View larger map

Housing & property in Jaunter

What it costs to live in Jaunter and how residents hold their homes, from the Australian Bureau of Statistics 2021 Census.

Owner-occupied
100%
of dwellings
Rented
0%
of dwellings

The full tenure and dwelling-type breakdown is in the Jaunter demographics section below.

How we treat property data. StreetScout shows official ABS housing figures and nothing more — no sale-price estimates, no real-estate agent referrals or lead capture, and we never pass your details to anyone. Just the public data, so you can read Jaunter for yourself.

Source: ABS Census of Population and Housing, 2021. © Australian Bureau of Statistics, released under CC BY 4.0. See our methodology.

Jaunter demographics (2021 Census)

The figures below profile Jaunter using the Australian Bureau of Statistics 2021 Census; every percentage is a share of a clearly stated Census count, so each one traces back to the source. At a glance, the largest age group is seniors (65+) at 33% and 0% of residents were born overseas.

Age profile

Age groupPeopleShare
Children (0–14)524%
Youth (15–24)00%
Young adults (25–44)629%
Mid-life (45–64)314%
Seniors (65+)733%

Share of the 21 people counted by age.

Housing and households

TenureDwellingsShare
Owned outright3100%
Owned with a mortgage00%
Rented00%
Dwelling typeDwellingsShare
Houses5100%
Townhouses & semis00%
Flats & apartments00%

Tenure and dwelling shares are of the roughly 5 occupied private dwellings in Jaunter.

Average household size
2.2 people
Median weekly family income
$450
Median weekly personal income
$574

Community and culture

Born overseas
0 (0%)
Speaks a language other than English at home
0 (0%)
Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander
3 (27%)

Work and education

Completed Year 12
5 (45%)
Labour-force participation
50%
Employed full-time
3
Employed part-time
3

Source: ABS Census of Population and Housing, 2021 (General Community Profile, by Suburb and Locality). © Australian Bureau of Statistics, released under CC BY 4.0. How we group bands and derive each share is set out on our methodology page.

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Common questions about Jaunter

Is Jaunter a good place to live?

There's no single answer, so we score what the public data can back. On socio-economic advantage, Jaunter rates 70/100 overall (Strong on the data we score). Public transport, schools and safety aren't scored yet — see our methodology for why.

Where is Jaunter?

Jaunter is a suburb of New South Wales, Australia, in the Oberon local government area.

What is the population of Jaunter?

At the 2021 Census, Jaunter had a population of about 11.

Is Jaunter an advantaged area?

Jaunter has an ABS SEIFA score of 1023, where about 1000 is the national average — higher scores indicate greater relative socio-economic advantage. That gives it a Suburb Score of 70 out of 100 — more socio-economically advantaged than about 70% of Australian suburbs.

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