Blairmount NSW 2559 property reports

Blairmount NSW 2559

Suburb

Suburb summary

Blairmount NSW 2559 is a residential suburb in South West & Macarthur, Sydney, with a 2.9291 km² area, population of 422, median age of 29, and average household size of 3.5. Housing is entirely separate houses, making Blairmount attractive for house buyers seeking low-density suburban living. Recent Blairmount house sales show a median price of $1.00M from 2 sales in the past 6 months. The suburb has many bus services, nearby T8 Campbelltown train access, and CBD commute times of about 90 minutes by public transport or 45 minutes by car. Blairmount property and real estate searches also benefit from local school rating data, with primary education rated 3.

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Demographic info

Median age

33 years

Renters

40%

Top 3 occupations

Technicians and Trades Workers20%
Managers10%
Professionals10%

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Living in Blairmount NSW 2559: Suburb Profile & FAQs

Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.

Is Blairmount NSW 2559 a good suburb for families?

Blairmount NSW 2559 is a solid option for families, especially for buyers who want a house-based suburb rather than an apartment-heavy setting. The housing mix is overwhelmingly separate houses, average household size sits at 3.5 people, and children make up a meaningful part of the population, with about 5.5% aged 0 to 4 and nearly 20% aged 5 to 14. That usually points to a suburb where family life is well established rather than incidental. Primary school performance also reads strongly, which adds to Blairmount’s appeal for buyers focused on school-age children and day-to-day family practicality. The trade-off is that safety sits at 2 out of 5 and the suburb feels more functional than polished, so it may not suit buyers chasing a particularly quiet or prestige family-friendly suburb. Still, for households prioritising space, established family housing and a practical South West setting, Blairmount is worth considering.

What is it like to live in Blairmount NSW 2559?

Living in Blairmount NSW 2559 feels practical, suburban and straightforward rather than trendy or highly walkable. It sits in the South West & Macarthur region and reads as a residential, built-up suburb with a simple everyday rhythm. That means Blairmount is likely to appeal to buyers who value a conventional suburban layout, detached housing and a familiar family-oriented setting over café culture or lifestyle buzz. The lifestyle trade-off is clear in the local amenity scores: walkability is 1 out of 5, retail is 1 out of 5, culture is 2 out of 5, and tree canopy cover is modest at 13.28%, so this is not the sort of suburb where most buyers will be strolling to lively shopping strips or enjoying a leafy village feel. In practical terms, Blairmount suits people who are comfortable driving for many errands and who want function, house space and a grounded suburban base.

Is Blairmount NSW 2559 well connected for commuting?

Blairmount NSW 2559 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s most seamless public transport suburbs. The suburb has many bus services and nearby access to the T8 Campbelltown train line, which helps keep it connected for buyers commuting beyond the local area. That gives Blairmount a workable public transport story, especially for a suburban market in the south-west, but it is not a suburb with its own train station, metro service, light rail or ferry access. The commute figures also show the trade-off clearly: average travel time to the Sydney CBD is around 90 minutes by public transport and about 45 minutes by car. So Blairmount can work for commuters, particularly those who drive or only travel to the city occasionally, but daily CBD workers may find the trip long. Buyers employed more locally or across the broader South West may find the location more convenient in practice.

Who does Blairmount NSW 2559 suit best?

Blairmount NSW 2559 suits family buyers, trades-based households and practical owner-occupiers who want a detached house suburb with a more accessible entry point than many inner and middle-ring Sydney locations. The suburb is entirely house-based in its recorded housing mix, with no meaningful apartment presence, and the median age of 29 points to a relatively young population. Occupationally, it leans toward technicians and trades workers, machinery operators and drivers, and clerical or administrative workers, which gives Blairmount a grounded, working suburban profile rather than a prestige professional one. Weekly median personal income of $681 and family income of $1,787 also suggest a more budget-conscious buyer base. Around a third of residents rent, so the area is not ultra-tightly held, but it still reads as an established residential suburb. Buyers wanting high-end lifestyle amenity, stronger walkability or a more executive demographic may find Blairmount less aligned with their priorities.

What are the pros and cons of living in Blairmount NSW 2559?

The main trade-off in Blairmount NSW 2559 is that you get house-based suburban practicality, but you give up some convenience, lifestyle energy and polish. On the plus side, Blairmount offers a strongly detached-housing environment, a family-sized household profile, plenty of bus services and nearby train access, which all support day-to-day functionality for buyers who value space and a conventional suburban setup. For some households, that is exactly the appeal. The downside is that the suburb’s amenity profile is modest: walkability is 1 out of 5, retail is 1 out of 5, culture is 2 out of 5, safety is 2 out of 5, and canopy cover is fairly low, so it does not deliver the leafy, village-style or walk-everywhere lifestyle some buyers want. That matters most to buyers chasing atmosphere or easier car-free living. For buyers focused on house stock, practicality and budget discipline, Blairmount may still be a good fit.

What are property prices like in Blairmount NSW 2559?

Property prices in Blairmount NSW 2559 look relatively affordable by Sydney house standards, although the recent sales sample is very small. In the last six months, the suburb recorded two house sales in the available results, with a median price of $1,000,000 and an average of about $1,075,000. That places Blairmount in a price bracket that is still significant for many buyers, but much less demanding than blue-chip Sydney house markets. In practical terms, buying property in Blairmount may appeal to households who need a freestanding house and want to stay under the higher budgets often required closer to the CBD or in prestige school belts. The qualification is important, though: with only two recent house sales returned, this is a thin sample, so buyers should treat it as a rough guide rather than a complete market picture. Even so, Blairmount appears to offer house-based value with the trade-off of a longer CBD commute and more modest lifestyle amenity.