Prices vary by street, lot size, condition, and whether the home is on-market or off. Anthony can tell you exactly what your budget gets you in Country Club Park right now.
Country Club Park is a designated historic district of grand early-1900s estates — Craftsman, Tudor, Spanish Colonial, and Mediterranean Revival homes once owned by some of LA's most prominent families, and one of central LA's best-kept architectural secrets.
Designated historic district, Mills Act properties, grand 1920s architecture, Country Club Park Heritage Plaza, minutes to Koreatown and Mid-Wilshire
Country Club Park's Historic Preservation Overlay Zone and Mills Act eligibility can mean substantial property-tax savings — a rare financial advantage for buyers of these grand historic homes.
Book Free Buyer Consultation →Country Club Park is one of Los Angeles' most architecturally significant and least-known historic neighborhoods — a designated Historic Preservation Overlay Zone of grand, intact early-1900s homes just south of Pico Boulevard in central LA. Developed alongside the Pico streetcar line at what was then the western edge of the city, the neighborhood originally housed some of Los Angeles' most prominent citizens, and as it matured through the 1920s boom its lots filled with Craftsman, Tudor Revival, Spanish Colonial Revival, Colonial Revival, and Mediterranean Revival estates. The median sale price is around $1.6 million in 2026 for homes of a scale and craftsmanship that would cost multiples of that on the Westside.
What sets Country Club Park apart financially is its historic status. Because the neighborhood is a designated Historic Preservation Overlay Zone, many properties are eligible for the Mills Act — a program that can substantially reduce annual property taxes in exchange for maintaining the home's historic character. For buyers of these grand, high-value homes, that tax savings can be significant over time, and it is a genuine advantage that few other central-LA neighborhoods offer. Understanding which properties carry Mills Act contracts, and how to navigate the program, is exactly where an experienced local agent earns their keep.
Anthony Galeano has spent 20+ years navigating the West LA market specifically — and Country Club Park is one of the markets he knows block by block. Whether you are exploring options, working with an agent who already has direct relationships in the Country Club Park market is a meaningful advantage.
Anthony works bilingually — English and Spanish — full service in both languages. CA DRE #01249041. Real Brokerage Technologies. Office at 8549 Wilshire Blvd Suite 535, Beverly Hills.
10 active listings in Country Club Park right now. Inventory shifts week to week — call (310) 437-3343 or text Anthony for live numbers, including off-market properties not on the MLS.
52 days on average. Correctly priced Country Club Park homes in desirable streets often sell within the first two weeks. The 52-day average reflects all listings including those that initially mispriced and had to reset.
The current median is $1,600,000. Prices vary significantly by street and lot — properties in the most desirable sections command meaningful premiums above the median, while less prominent streets offer relative value.
Yes. Anthony's 20+ years of West LA relationships mean ongoing access to off-market and pre-market properties in Country Club Park. Roughly a quarter of high-end transactions on the Westside happen this way.
School quality is one of the primary drivers of value in Country Club Park — Anthony can pull current ratings, boundary maps, and parent-network feedback for any specific street.