Section 32 red flags to check when buying in Caulfield East, VIC 3145
Caulfield East is one of Melbourne’s most heritage-dense suburbs — around 48% sits under a Heritage Overlay — so many homes are period properties where demolition and even external changes need a planning permit. With a median house price of $1,550,000 and 44 train stops inside the suburb, Caulfield East attracts plenty of buyers — which makes reading the vendor statement carefully, before you bid or sign, all the more important.
New to vendor statements? Start with the plain-English Section 32 guide.
Suburb boundary — the coloured area is Caulfield East. Map © OpenStreetMap, © CARTO.
Caulfield East by the numbers
Mix of dwelling types across the suburb (Census 2021)
* Recorded crime counts every offence police logged in the wider council area over the latest year — theft, property damage, drug and traffic offences and the like, not only violent crime — divided by the council’s resident population. It’s a broad council-wide signal, not a figure for this exact street.
These are suburb-level indicators, not property-specific — always confirm the exact address on the Section 32. Sources: ABS Census 2021, Valuer-General Victoria, Crime Statistics Agency Victoria, Vicmap planning overlays, OpenStreetMap. What do these terms mean?
What to check before you buy in Caulfield East
The specific things worth confirming here, plus the two every buyer should check.
Heritage Overlay likely
About 48% of Caulfield East sits under a Heritage Overlay — a high-heritage suburb. Check whether one applies to this property: it can restrict demolition, extensions and even exterior paint colours, and a permit is needed for changes. Confirm it’s disclosed in the planning section.
Easements & covenants
Check Section 3 for easements (e.g. drainage/sewer along a boundary — you usually can’t build over them) and restrictive covenants (single-dwelling, materials, height) that limit your plans.
Owners corporation (if applicable)
Apartments and many townhouses in Caulfield East are in an owners corporation. If so, the statement must include its certificate — review annual fees, any special levies, the maintenance fund and insurance.
Caulfield East Section 32 — FAQ
What should I check in a Section 32 for Caulfield East?
For Caulfield East, pay particular attention to heritage overlays (about 48% of the suburb is affected), any flood-related overlay (~0%), easements and restrictive covenants on the title, and — for apartments — the owners-corporation certificate with its fees and any special levies.
Does Caulfield East have heritage overlays?
Heritage overlays cover roughly 48% of Caulfield East. That doesn’t mean every property is affected, but it’s common enough that you should confirm whether a Heritage Overlay applies to the specific parcel — it restricts demolition and external changes.
Is a free Section 32 review legal advice?
No. Delora gives a fast, plain-English review to help you understand the statement and ask better questions. Always have a licensed conveyancer or solicitor review the contract before you sign.