StreetScout

Mount Horner, WA

By Lauren McCaleb · Reviewed by Dylan Duncan ·

35/100
Suburb Score

Less advantaged than the national average

Mount Horner is more socio-economically advantaged than about 35% of the 14,462 Australian suburbs we score, based on the ABS SEIFA index (raw score 962, 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 Mount Horner 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.

35/100
Livability

Below the national middle on the data we score

A weighted blend of the 1 component we can score for Mount Horner 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

35/100

Less advantaged than the national average

Less advantaged than the national average — the same ABS SEIFA-based Suburb Score (35/100) 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.

Mount Horner at a glance

Population (2021)
13
Median age
52
Median weekly household income
$1,875
SEIFA score
962
Local government area
Irwin
Coordinates
-29.1457, 115.1560

Map of Mount Horner

© OpenStreetMap contributors · View larger map

Housing & property in Mount Horner

What it costs to live in Mount Horner 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 Mount Horner 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 Mount Horner for yourself.

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

Mount Horner demographics (2021 Census)

The figures below profile Mount Horner 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 mid-life (45–64) at 52% and 0% of residents were born overseas.

Age profile

Age groupPeopleShare
Children (0–14)524%
Youth (15–24)00%
Young adults (25–44)00%
Mid-life (45–64)1152%
Seniors (65+)524%

Share of the 21 people counted by age.

Housing and households

TenureDwellingsShare
Owned outright4100%
Owned with a mortgage00%
Rented00%
Dwelling typeDwellingsShare
Houses3100%
Townhouses & semis00%
Flats & apartments00%

Tenure and dwelling shares are of the roughly 3 occupied private dwellings in Mount Horner.

Average household size
3 people
Median weekly family income
$2,749
Median weekly personal income
$612

Community and culture

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

Work and education

Completed Year 12
9 (64%)
Labour-force participation
92.9%
Employed full-time
3
Employed part-time
7

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 Mount Horner

Is Mount Horner a good place to live?

There's no single answer, so we score what the public data can back. On socio-economic advantage, Mount Horner rates 35/100 overall (Below the national middle on the data we score). Public transport, schools and safety aren't scored yet — see our methodology for why.

Where is Mount Horner?

Mount Horner is a suburb of Western Australia, Australia, in the Irwin local government area.

What is the population of Mount Horner?

At the 2021 Census, Mount Horner had a population of about 13.

Is Mount Horner an advantaged area?

Mount Horner has an ABS SEIFA score of 962, where about 1000 is the national average — higher scores indicate greater relative socio-economic advantage. That gives it a Suburb Score of 35 out of 100 — more socio-economically advantaged than about 35% of Australian suburbs.

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