California · City Profile

Glendale, CA

ZIP codes
14
Population
174,945
Median income
$82,562
Median home value
$963,555

Glendale sits in Los Angeles, California, and is covered by 14 ZIP code tabulation areas. Across those ZIPs, an estimated 174,945 people live, work, and commute. Demographic and housing figures come from the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates (2018–2022).

Each ZIP code in Glendale has its own character. Some are dense and walkable; others are exurban or rural, with single-digit households per square mile. The list below lets you compare the basic shape of each one — population, income, and home value — before clicking through to the full neighborhood profile.

Across the city overall, the typical owner-occupied home is valued near $963,555 and median asking rent runs around $2,217 per month. Median household income hovers around $82,562. These are averages of ZIP-level medians and will read differently depending on which neighborhood you actually settle in — which is precisely what the per-ZIP pages are for.

ZIP codes in Glendale

ZIPCountyPopulationMedian incomeMedian home value
91201 Los Angeles 22,163 $67,102 $1,036,400
91202 Los Angeles 22,831 $90,232 $1,061,900
91203 Los Angeles 16,679 $70,650 $644,900
91204 Los Angeles 18,445 $69,102 $768,100
91205 Los Angeles 35,755 $58,290 $780,300
91206 Los Angeles 32,294 $85,651 $1,019,300
91207 Los Angeles 11,091 $106,984 $1,163,000
91208 Los Angeles 15,377 $112,485 $1,198,100
91209 Los Angeles 0
91210 Los Angeles 310 $1,000,000
91221 Los Angeles 0
91222 Los Angeles 0
91225 Los Angeles 0
91226 Los Angeles 0

Thinking about relocating to Glendale?

A few practical considerations as you evaluate the move:

  • Pick the ZIP, not just the city. Median income, school assignments, walkability and crime patterns can vary dramatically between neighboring ZIPs in the same city. Use the per-ZIP pages to compare.
  • Compare housing math honestly. The median home value here is $963,555, and median rent is $2,217. At current mortgage rates, that often makes renting the more flexible option for the first 12–24 months while you learn the neighborhoods.
  • Verify the commute. Drive your prospective work or school route at peak time — Google Maps optimistic estimates rarely match what locals actually experience.
  • Check the boring stuff. Property tax rates, HOA dues, flood-zone designation, and homeowner's insurance availability are easier to research before you sign than after.