
Blackett NSW 2770
Suburb summary
Blackett NSW 2770 is a Western Sydney suburb with a house-focused market and recent Blackett property sales showing a median house price of $875,000 across 14 sales in the past 6 months. The suburb has 3,452 residents, a median age of 31, average household size of 3, and population density of 3,246.8 people per sq km. Separate houses make up 97% of dwellings, with apartments at 1%. Blackett offers many bus services and nearby access to the T1/T5 rail network via Mount Druitt. Commute times are about 75 minutes by public transport and 45 minutes by car to the Sydney CBD.
Pocket Price Distribution
See how house prices vary across different parts of the suburb, and where this pocket sits in the local market.Suburb median
$846k
Derived from sales
House sales
37
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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90 popular houses in Blackett NSW 2770
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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Demographic info
Median age
31 years
Renters
50%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Blackett NSW 2770: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Blackett NSW 2770 a good suburb for families?
Blackett NSW 2770 is a mixed option for families rather than a standout family-friendly suburb. On the positive side, the suburb has a strong separate-house share at 97%, very few apartments, and an average household size of 3, which points to a practical suburban layout that can work well for households needing more room. The local age profile also shows a solid presence of children, with 9.6% aged 0 to 4 and 17.0% aged 5 to 14, so buyers looking for a suburb with other family households around will see that Blackett is clearly used by families, not just singles or investors. School ratings are 6 out of 10 for both primary and secondary, which suggests a serviceable rather than high-performing school picture. The biggest trade-off is safety, rated 1 out of 5, so buyers focused heavily on peace of mind may want to be selective and compare nearby suburbs as well.
What is it like to live in Blackett NSW 2770?
Living in Blackett NSW 2770 feels practical, suburban, and fairly no-frills rather than polished or lifestyle-led. Blackett sits in Western Sydney and reads as a straightforward residential suburb with an urban, built-up character, so daily life here is more about function than village charm or prestige appeal. The tree canopy is modest at 15.19%, and walkability, retail, and culture all sit at 2 out of 5, which suggests buyers should not expect a leafy, walk-everywhere environment with lots happening at the doorstep. In everyday terms, Blackett is likely to suit people who value a suburban house setting and a simpler pace over café culture or a highly activated local centre. The trade-off is that the suburb lifestyle can feel limited if you want strong dining, shopping, or a more vibrant atmosphere. For buyers prioritising practicality and house-based living, though, Blackett may still feel straightforward and manageable.
Is Blackett NSW 2770 well connected for commuting?
Blackett NSW 2770 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s most seamless public transport suburbs. The suburb itself does not have a train station, although train access is nearby via Mount Druitt on the T1 and T5 lines, and bus services are listed as many, which helps with everyday movement across the area. That means public transport is workable rather than effortless, especially for buyers who are comfortable using a bus link to reach rail. The average commute to the Sydney CBD is about 75 minutes by public transport and 45 minutes by car, so Blackett is more realistic for buyers who do not need a fast inner-city trip every day. There is no metro, light rail, or ferry service here, so the transport mix is narrower than in better-connected middle-ring suburbs. For Western Sydney buyers, though, Blackett can still make sense if budget matters more than a premium commute.
Who does Blackett NSW 2770 suit best?
Blackett NSW 2770 suits budget-conscious house buyers, larger households, and owner-occupiers who want space over prestige. The housing mix is the clearest clue: 97% of homes are separate houses and only 1% are apartments, so this is a suburb that naturally fits buyers looking for a freestanding home rather than unit living. The median age is 31 and the average household size is 3, which points to a younger, family-based community profile. Nearly half of homes are rented at 49.4%, so Blackett has a more mixed and active tenure pattern than tightly held prestige suburbs. Income levels are also modest, with median weekly personal income at $478 and family income at $1,085, which helps explain why value-focused buyers may look here. Blackett may suit apartment buyers, high-income prestige seekers, or buyers wanting a polished professional demographic less well, especially with managers and professionals making up only 9.2% of residents.
What are the pros and cons of living in Blackett NSW 2770?
The main trade-off in Blackett NSW 2770 is that buyers can access a house-based suburban setting, but they give up some lifestyle polish, safety, and commuter convenience in return. What Blackett does well is provide a strongly detached-housing suburb, with 97% separate houses, many bus services, nearby rail via Mount Druitt, and a driving commute to the CBD that is more manageable than the public transport trip. That will matter to buyers who want practical family space and are willing to travel for broader amenities. On the other hand, safety is rated 1 out of 5, while walkability, retail, and culture are each 2 out of 5, so buyers should not expect a vibrant, highly convenient, or especially calm lifestyle setting. Tree cover is also fairly modest at 15.19%, reinforcing its built-up feel. For the right buyer, especially one focused on house access and budget control, those compromises may still be acceptable.
What are property prices like in Blackett NSW 2770?
Property prices in Blackett NSW 2770 look relatively affordable by Sydney house standards. Over the recent six-month sales sample, houses recorded a median price of $875,000 across 13 sales, with an average of about $885,346. The middle of the market appears fairly tight, with the 25th percentile at $855,000 and the 75th percentile at $900,000, which suggests many typical Blackett house sales are clustering around the high-$800,000 range rather than spreading widely. At the upper end, sales reached $1.34 million, while the lowest sale was $450,000, so there is still variation depending on land, condition, and presentation. For buyers asking whether Blackett is expensive, the answer is generally no compared with many Sydney house markets. The trade-off is that the lower entry price comes with a more modest lifestyle profile, longer public transport commute, and a suburb that is more practical than aspirational for many buyers.
