Most people outside of Burbank have never heard of the Burbank Rancho. That’s part of what makes it special.
I’ve lived here for nearly 20 years. I raise my golden retriever Bodhi on these streets, host community events at Mountain View Park, and have helped dozens of families buy and sell homes in this neighborhood. So when people ask me what the Burbank Rancho is, I take the question seriously — because the honest answer is that it’s one of the best places to live in all of Los Angeles County, and most of the region doesn’t know it yet.
Where Is the Burbank Rancho?
The Burbank Rancho sits in the elevated residential section of Burbank, roughly bounded by Glenoaks Boulevard to the south, Sunset Canyon Drive to the north, Hollywood Way to the west, and the hillside ridgeline to the east. It’s an easy 15-minute drive to Burbank Airport, 25 minutes to downtown LA on a good day, and walking distance to some of the city’s best schools.
But geography only tells part of the story.
The Architecture
What defines the Rancho visually is its housing stock. The neighborhood was developed primarily between the 1940s and the early 1960s, and the homes reflect it — classic California ranch-style single-family homes with generous lots, mature trees, and the kind of low-slung, wide-fronted silhouette that feels unmistakably mid-century.
These are not cookie-cutter tract homes. Many have been thoughtfully updated while preserving their original character — refinished hardwood floors, updated kitchens that respect the bones of the original design, backyard pools that feel like they’ve always been there. Others are waiting for the right buyer to bring them back to life. Both types sell well here.
The lot sizes are larger than you’d find in comparable Burbank neighborhoods closer to the flatlands, and the street grid has a relaxed, winding quality that creates a genuine sense of enclosure and community. On a quiet Saturday morning, Bodhi and I can walk for an hour and barely cross the same street twice.
The Community
What I hear most often from people who move here — especially those coming from denser parts of LA — is that they didn’t expect to feel like they were part of a neighborhood. The Rancho has that quality.
There are neighbors who have been here for 30, 40, even 50 years. There are also young families who found the Rancho through word of mouth and moved quickly when something came available. That mix of long-term residents and new arrivals creates a healthy community dynamic — people who know the history and people who are excited about the future.
We run community events throughout the year: the Thanksgiving Pie Giveaway, a Holiday Raffle, a Valentine’s Chocolate Giveaway, and seasonal park events at Mountain View Park on West Riverside Drive. The turnout is always strong, and it tells you something about the neighborhood that people actually show up.
The Schools
The Burbank Rancho is served by Burbank Unified School District, one of the most consistently well-regarded school districts in Los Angeles County. Elementary-age children typically attend Jefferson, Roosevelt, or Providencia Elementary depending on their exact address. Jordan Middle School and Burbank High School serve the neighborhood at the secondary level.
For families relocating from other parts of LA, the school quality in Burbank is often the deciding factor — and the Rancho is well-positioned within the district.
What Homes Sell For Here
The Burbank Rancho is not a budget neighborhood — and it’s not priced like one. Single-family homes here regularly sell between $1.2 million and $2.5 million depending on size, condition, lot, and views. Exceptional properties break above that ceiling: our sale at 913 Sherlock Drive closed at $2,675,000 — over 40% above the automated Zillow and Redfin estimates.
What that number reflects is something the algorithms can’t fully account for: the premium buyers place on authenticity, community, and quality of life. The Rancho has all three in abundance.
Homes here also tend to move quickly when they’re properly prepared and priced. Buyers who know the neighborhood are ready to act. Sellers who work with an advisor who understands the micro-market — rather than treating the Rancho like every other Burbank zip code — consistently see better outcomes.
Thinking of buying or selling in the Burbank Rancho?
I’ve been here long enough to know what makes a home in this neighborhood worth holding onto, and what makes it worth more than the seller expected.