
Bligh Park NSW 2756
Suburb summary
Bligh Park, NSW 2756 is a residential suburb in Sydney’s Outer West, covering 2.1151 sq km with a population of 6,366 and median age of 31. Popular searches like Bligh Park NSW, Bligh Park house prices and living in Bligh Park fit its profile: 100% separate houses, average household size 2.9, and 39 house sales in the past 6 months with a median house price of $1.13M. Median weekly personal income is $794 and family income is $1,916. Bligh Park has primary school rating 4/5, secondary 3/5, safety 2/5, bus service rated many, nearby train access, and average CBD commute times of 110 minutes by public transport and 60 minutes by car.
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
$1M
Derived from sales
House sales
95
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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186 popular houses in Bligh Park NSW 2756
Apartment projects
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PROJECTS MAP

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1 popular apartments in Bligh Park NSW 2756
Demographic info
Median age
32 years
Renters
30%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Bligh Park NSW 2756: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Bligh Park NSW 2756 a good suburb for families?
Bligh Park NSW 2756 is a solid suburb for families, especially for buyers who want a detached house area with a strong local family presence. The housing mix is a big part of that appeal: separate houses make up essentially all dwellings, apartments are almost non-existent, and the average household size of 2.9 suggests a genuine family household pattern rather than a mostly transient market. Children are well represented too, with about 9.4% of residents aged 0 to 4 and 14.7% aged 5 to 14, which supports the feel of a suburb where kids and school-age families are part of everyday life. The trade-off is that schools and safety look mixed rather than standout, with a primary rating of 8 out of 10, a secondary rating of 6 out of 10, and safety at 2 out of 5. So Bligh Park can work well for families who prioritise house-based living and space, but some buyers may want to weigh up schooling choice and neighbourhood feel carefully.
What is it like to live in Bligh Park NSW 2756?
Living in Bligh Park NSW 2756 feels practical, suburban, and fairly no-fuss rather than polished, walk-everywhere, or lifestyle-led. It sits in Sydney’s Outer West and reads as a straightforward residential suburb with an urban built-up setting, so the day-to-day experience is more about local routine and house-based living than café culture or destination appeal. That matches the data: walkability is 1 out of 5, retail is 2 out of 5, culture is 2 out of 5, and there is no beach access, so most errands and leisure plans will lean more heavily on driving than on strolling to everything nearby. For buyers asking what it is like to live in Bligh Park, the answer is that it should suit people who prefer a simpler suburban lifestyle with detached homes and fewer density pressures. The trade-off is convenience and atmosphere: if you want a leafy village feel or a more vibrant, highly walkable suburb lifestyle, Bligh Park may feel a bit limited.
Is Bligh Park NSW 2756 well connected for commuting?
Bligh Park NSW 2756 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s easiest suburbs for public transport-based CBD travel. The suburb does not have its own train station, although rail access is available nearby via the T1 line at Windsor, and bus services are rated as many rather than limited. That gives locals workable transport options for broader movement around the area. The catch is the time cost: the average public transport commute to the Sydney CBD is about 110 minutes, while driving averages around 60 minutes. In practical terms, that means Bligh Park is more manageable for buyers whose work is local, hybrid, or not tied to daily city commuting. If your priority is a fast, simple train run into town, this suburb will likely feel less convenient than middle-ring or better-serviced rail suburbs. Still, for buyers willing to trade commute speed for house-oriented living in the Outer West, it remains a usable option.
Who does Bligh Park NSW 2756 suit best?
Bligh Park NSW 2756 suits best buyers looking for an affordable-to-mid-range detached house suburb with a practical suburban profile rather than a prestige or high-density urban one. The suburb is overwhelmingly made up of separate houses, with virtually no apartment market, which immediately points it toward families, upgraders, and buyers who want land and a traditional house format. The resident profile also supports that practical feel: the median weekly family income is $1,916, the median age is 31, and the leading occupations include technicians and trades workers, clerical and administrative workers, and professionals. Rental share sits around 35.9%, so it is not ultra-tightly held, but it is also not purely investor-driven. That mix suggests Bligh Park attracts buyers who value space, function, and relative accessibility over prestige branding. It may suit apartment-focused buyers, heavy CBD commuters, or those wanting a more walkable professional hub less well, because the suburb’s strengths are more suburban and house-based than lifestyle-dense.
What are the pros and cons of living in Bligh Park NSW 2756?
The main trade-off in Bligh Park NSW 2756 is that you get house-based suburban living and practical value, but you give up some convenience, lifestyle intensity, and commuting ease. On the plus side, Bligh Park is almost entirely made up of separate houses, has many bus services, nearby access to the T1 train line, and a younger family-age profile that can make it appealing for buyers who want room to spread out. That type of housing mix is increasingly hard to find in more central parts of Sydney. On the other hand, the suburb is not especially walkable, retail and cultural amenity are modest, safety is only 2 out of 5, and the CBD commute by public transport is long at around 110 minutes. So the disadvantages of living in Bligh Park mainly affect buyers who want a more connected, lively, or lower-friction daily routine. For the right buyer, though, especially someone focused on house living over inner-city convenience, those compromises may be acceptable.
What are property prices like in Bligh Park NSW 2756?
Property prices in Bligh Park NSW 2756 look mid-range by Sydney house standards, with recent sales suggesting a more accessible entry point than many established family-house suburbs closer to the city. Over the past six months, houses recorded 36 sales with a median price of $1,085,000, an average of about $1,093,111, and a middle price band that broadly ran from $930,000 at the 25th percentile to $1,185,000 at the 75th percentile. That tells buyers there is a real house market here with a decent spread, rather than just one-off prestige results. Apartment data is too thin to lean on, with only one recorded sale at $810,000, so house prices are the more meaningful guide for Bligh Park. In practical terms, buying property in Bligh Park may appeal to families wanting a freestanding home without stepping into Sydney’s premium price brackets. The trade-off is that the lower price point relative to many suburbs comes with a longer CBD commute and more modest walkability and lifestyle amenity.
