Hampton Park is in the Casey council area. Before you sign, a Section 32 vendor statement must disclose what affects this land — here’s what matters most in Hampton Park, checked against the public record.
Hampton Park has relatively light heritage-overlay coverage (about 0%), though it can still apply to individual parcels — worth confirming for the specific property. It also carries meaningful flood-overlay coverage (about 22% of the suburb), so drainage and inundation controls deserve a close look on any low-lying block. With a median house price of $735,000 and 0 train stops inside the suburb, Hampton Park 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 complete Section 32 guide.
Suburb-level indicators. Use them to sense-check what the vendor statement says — and spot what it leaves out.
Hampton Park has a population of 26,082, a median age of 33 and a median household income of $1,538 per week. For getting around there are 0 train, 0 tram and 105 bus stops, with the nearest station about 2.3 km away. On the amenity side, OpenStreetMap lists 5 cafés, 6 supermarkets, 54 parks and 6 schools in and around Hampton Park.
The specific risks worth confirming for this suburb, plus the two every buyer should check.
Roughly 22% of Hampton Park carries a flood-related overlay. Confirm the land isn’t in a Land Subject to Inundation Overlay (LSIO) or Special Building Overlay (SBO) — both affect insurance, build height and what you can construct.
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.
Apartments and many townhouses in Hampton Park are in an owners corporation. If so, the statement must include its certificate — review annual fees, any special levies, the maintenance fund and insurance.
For Hampton Park, pay particular attention to heritage overlays (about 0% of the suburb is affected), any flood-related overlay (~22%), easements and restrictive covenants on the title, and — for apartments — the owners-corporation certificate with its fees and any special levies.
Heritage overlays cover roughly 0% of Hampton Park. 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.
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.