
Englorie Park NSW 2560
Suburb summary
Englorie Park, NSW 2560 is a residential suburb in South West & Macarthur, Sydney, covering 0.1075 km² with a population of 416 and median age 31. Popular searches like Englorie Park NSW suburb profile, Englorie Park property market, and living in Englorie Park fit its mainly house-based character: 96 separate houses, 78% of dwellings, versus 11 apartments. Average household size is 2.9, median weekly personal income is $700, family income $1,625, and 55.94% of homes are rented. Over the past 6 months, recorded house sales were limited at 2, with an average price of $582,500. Nearby T8 Campbelltown train access and many bus services support connectivity.
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
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Derived from sales
House sales
4
In past 12 months
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Pocket Price Map

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9 popular houses in Englorie Park NSW 2560
Apartment projects
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Demographic info
Median age
36 years
Renters
50%
Top 3 occupations
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Living in Englorie Park NSW 2560: Suburb Profile & FAQs
Note: Data is sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) 2021 Census data and knest.ai internal statistical data.
Is Englorie Park NSW 2560 a good suburb for families?
Englorie Park NSW 2560 is a solid suburb for families, especially buyers who want a house-based area rather than a dense apartment setting. The housing mix is strongly family-oriented, with about 78% separate houses and only around 9% apartments, and the average household size of 2.9 suggests a suburb that suits established households. Children are also a visible part of the local profile, with roughly 13.1% of residents aged 0 to 4 and 10.9% aged 5 to 14, which supports the sense that Englorie Park is good for kids in practical day-to-day terms. School ratings are a real strength here, with both primary and secondary education sitting at 8 out of 10. The main qualification is that safety rates only 1 out of 5, so while Englorie Park has clear family suburb fundamentals, buyers who place schools and safety at the very top of their checklist should weigh that trade-off carefully.
What is it like to live in Englorie Park NSW 2560?
Living in Englorie Park NSW 2560 feels practical, suburban, and straightforward rather than polished, walk-everywhere, or lifestyle-led. It sits in the South West & Macarthur region and reads as a residential suburb with an urban, built-up character, so the day-to-day experience is more about space and routine than café strips or standout scenery. That fits the data: walkability, retail, and culture all sit at 2 out of 5, which points to a suburb where many errands and activities are likely to involve a car or a short drive. Tree canopy cover is also low at just over 8%, so Englorie Park does not come across as especially leafy. For buyers, that means the suburb lifestyle is more functional than atmospheric. The upside is a simple house-oriented setting that may suit families and owner-occupiers wanting value and room; the trade-off is a less vibrant, less picturesque everyday environment.
Is Englorie Park NSW 2560 well connected for commuting?
Englorie Park NSW 2560 is reasonably well connected for commuting, but it is not one of Sydney’s strongest public transport suburbs. Train access is nearby rather than within the suburb itself, with connections to the T8 Campbelltown line, and bus coverage is rated as many, which gives residents a workable public transport base. That said, there is no metro, no light rail, and no ferry access, so the transport mix is fairly conventional and relies on buses plus nearby rail rather than multiple high-frequency modes. The average trip to the Sydney CBD is about 95 minutes by public transport, compared with around 50 minutes by car, which tells buyers that Englorie Park is more realistic for local or regional commuting than a quick city run. For purchasers asking if Englorie Park is good for commuters, the answer is yes in a practical sense, but daily CBD workers need to be comfortable with longer travel times.
Who does Englorie Park NSW 2560 suit best?
Englorie Park NSW 2560 suits family buyers, upgrader-style households, and value-focused owner-occupiers who want a detached home in a suburban setting. The suburb’s housing mix is the clearest signal: around 78% of homes are separate houses, while apartments make up only about 9%, so buyers looking for land, multiple bedrooms, and a more traditional family-home format are better aligned with Englorie Park than high-density or inner-city style purchasers. The resident profile also looks broad rather than elite-only, with professionals making up about 28% of residents, followed by clerical and administrative workers and sales workers. Median weekly family income of $1,625 and a median age of 31 suggest a younger, working household base. With roughly 56% of homes rented, the suburb feels more mixed and active than tightly held prestige areas. It may suit downsizers or apartment-first buyers less well, especially if they want stronger walkability or a more lifestyle-driven environment.
What are the pros and cons of living in Englorie Park NSW 2560?
The main trade-off in Englorie Park NSW 2560 is that buyers get a practical house-based suburb, but they give up some lifestyle polish, greenery, and transport convenience in return. On the plus side, Englorie Park has a strong detached-house profile, plenty of bus service, nearby train access, and school ratings of 8 out of 10 for both primary and secondary levels. Those are meaningful strengths for buyers focused on day-to-day family function rather than image. On the other hand, the suburb scores 2 out of 5 for walkability, retail, and culture, has low canopy cover at 8.04%, and records a 95-minute public transport commute to the CBD, so it is not a walkable village or quick city-fringe option. Safety at 1 out of 5 is another caution point. That does not rule Englorie Park out, but it means the suburb is likely to appeal most to buyers who prioritise house format, schools, and relative practicality over atmosphere and convenience.
What are property prices like in Englorie Park NSW 2560?
Property prices in Englorie Park NSW 2560 look relatively affordable by Sydney standards, though the recent sales sample is very small, so buyers should treat it as indicative rather than definitive. In the last six months, the available suburb-level sales history shows two recorded house sales, with an average price of about $582,500 and a median of $260,000. Because that result comes from only two house sales, it is better used as a rough snapshot than a firm benchmark for all buying property in Englorie Park. Even so, the pricing picture suggests Englorie Park may offer a lower entry point than many house suburbs across Sydney, which will interest budget-conscious family buyers who still want a detached home. The trade-off is that lower prices often come with compromises in commute time, walkability, lifestyle amenity, or overall suburb prestige. There was no apartment pricing returned in the recent sales data, so the clearest current read is on houses rather than units.
