Today, the cadastral commune Inzersdorf has got an area of 854.06 hectares (3.2975 sq mi) and is so on the biggest part of the district.
But in the 19th century, independent Inzersdorf had also got place in the today 10th Viennese district, and bordered on the villages Vösendorf, Leopoldsdorf, Ober‑ and Unterlaa, and (in the west) on Erlaa.
The village is located in a flat marsh, thus a lot of clay was deposited in the area by the Liesing River.
When the brothers Geyer von Osterburg ruled the village in the 16th century, Inzersdorf became the hub of evangelic church.
After the integration of that northern part which was called now Inzersdorf-Stadt (Inzersdorf-City), the rest of the village was economically degraded.
After the "Anschluss" (annexation of Austria into Greater Germany by the Nazi regime), Inzersdorf was merged with Liesing and 13 other villages into "Great-Vienna".
[4] Other well-known buildings are the Maria-Theresien-Schlössel which was constructed by an architect coming from the environment of Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach and the Grünberger-Schlössl, a summer residence built in 1720/30.