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Quick Facts: Lake Lindero at a Glance

Feature Detail
Price Range $800,000 to $2,000,000+
Bedrooms 3 to 4
Square Footage Approximately 1,400 to 2,800 sq ft
Year Built Late 1960s through 1970s
HOA Yes, Lake Lindero HOA (LLHOA); low dues with access to Country Club amenities
Approximate Homes Approximately 459 HOA member parcels within the broader Lake Lindero community
Gated No
School District Las Virgenes Unified School District (LVUSD)

Lake Lindero is one of the few neighborhoods in Agoura Hills where you can buy a single-family home on a quiet residential street and walk to a golf course, a pool, and a restaurant without ever starting your car.

What Is Lake Lindero Known For?

Ask any longtime Agoura Hills resident what comes to mind when you say Lake Lindero and the answer is almost always the same: the golf course, the lake, and the fact that the neighborhood feels like a small town inside a small city. I've been showing homes on streets like Sandtrap Drive, Hackers Lane, Slicers Circle, and Old Salt Lane for years, and the one thing that never changes is how immediately the area feels different from the rest of Agoura Hills. The streets curve around the contours of a Ted Robinson-designed 9-hole executive golf course, and many of the homes back directly to fairways or catch views of the water hazards winding through the property. That's not a marketing phrase. It's the literal geography of the place. The neighborhood was developed in the late 1960s and early 1970s during a major construction boom in the Conejo Valley, and its origins go back even further: the land was once Lindero Ranch, owned and operated by Clarence "Kelly" Johnson, the legendary Lockheed aeronautical engineer and father of the Skunk Works program. A developer purchased the ranch from Johnson in 1962, built out the initial homes, and dug the lake near the Ventura Freeway before the surrounding tracts filled in.

The typical buyer I see here is not someone who stumbled into Lake Lindero by accident. They found it on purpose. It tends to be families who want a real neighborhood, with sidewalks and neighbors they'll actually know, priced a notch below the fully custom homes of Old Agoura or Morrison Highlands, but with a lifestyle amenity, namely the Country Club next door, that most comparably-priced tracts simply cannot offer. There's also a meaningful move-up contingent: buyers relocating from townhome communities like Annandale or Chateau Park who want their first detached home with a yard and are willing to take on some cosmetic updating to land in this zip code. The mix of modest originals alongside fully remodeled showcases is part of the appeal. It keeps the price range wide and the entry point real.

Floor Plans and Home Styles in Lake Lindero

Lake Lindero is not a single-builder tract with three identical models repeated down every street. It was developed in phases over roughly a decade, which means you'll encounter meaningful variety as you walk the neighborhood. The most common homes are single-story ranch plans in the 1,200 to 1,600 square foot range, built on modest lots generally around 5,000 to 7,500 square feet. These are the original post-and-beam influenced California ranches of the early 1970s: low-pitched rooflines, attached two-car garages, front lawns that have often since been replaced with drought-tolerant landscaping, and floor plans that typically include three bedrooms, two baths, a combined living and dining area, and a kitchen oriented toward the backyard. When these homes have been left original, they're entry-level for the tract and represent the best renovation opportunity on the market. When they've been updated, they frequently sell well north of a million dollars, because the bones are solid and the lot configurations on the golf course-adjacent streets are hard to replicate.

The two-story plans, which tend to cluster closer to Lake Lindero Drive and on certain cul-de-sacs like Slicers Circle and Passageway Place, run larger, typically 1,800 to 2,400 square feet, with four bedrooms and a separate formal living area. These were built for growing families and the floor plans show it: the primary suite occupies one end of the upper floor, two or three secondary bedrooms share the other end, and the downstairs is designed for living and entertaining rather than just circulation. A handful of larger custom builds pushed past 2,600 square feet, and those tend to be the headline sales when they hit the market.

In terms of architectural character, the dominant aesthetic is California casual. You won't find a lot of Mediterranean arched entryways or Tudor details here. What you will find, especially on the renovated homes, are clean lines, wide-plank oak floors, white oak cabinetry, Fleetwood or Milgard sliding systems that open to the yard, and updated primary baths that rival anything you'd see in a newer tract. The renovation patterns I see repeated most often are kitchen-primary-landscape in that order, sometimes stopping at kitchen and calling it done, sometimes running the full sweep. Buyers should budget for older systems regardless: galvanized supply lines and original panel boxes are common in the unimproved homes, and roofs tend to date from the 1990s or early 2000s on anything that hasn't been touched recently.

What Is It Like to Live in Lake Lindero?

Saturday morning in Lake Lindero has a specific rhythm to it. By eight o'clock, golfers are already walking the first fairway of the Lake Lindero Golf Course, pulling carts along a layout that Ted Robinson threaded through ponds and a ravine cutting across the neighborhood's western edge. Meanwhile, neighbors are out with dogs on the sidewalks that run along Sandtrap Drive and Canwood Street, cutting over toward the Reyes Adobe park complex or just doing a loop past the lake itself. It doesn't feel like a subdivision performing its idea of community. It just feels like people who genuinely like where they live.

The neighbors skew family-heavy, particularly on the streets closest to Yerba Buena Elementary and Lindero Canyon Middle School, both of which sit within the Lake Lindero neighborhood boundaries. You'll also find a meaningful empty-nester population, longtime owners who've been here twenty or thirty years and have no intention of leaving. That combination creates an unusually stable social fabric. Halloween is legitimately excellent here: the streets are lit, families turn out in force, and the cul-de-sacs on Slicers Circle and Penrod Drive are exactly as good as you'd hope. Dog ownership is nearly universal, which is part of what drives the walking culture. Traffic is modest by Los Angeles County standards. The Ventura Freeway runs along the neighborhood's southern edge, and there is some ambient freeway noise on the homes closest to it, which buyers should factor into their shortlist when comparing specific addresses.

For everyday errands, the household anchors are all within a mile or two of the neighborhood's core. Trader Joe's in Agoura Hills is under two miles away on Kanan Road and covers most of what a household needs. Jinky's Café at 29001 Canwood Street is the neighborhood breakfast spot and has been for years: loud, packed on weekends, excellent omelets, and close enough that you can be in and out before the rest of the family wakes up. Urbane Café at 29145 Canwood Street is the weekday lunch anchor, fast-casual and solid. For dinner, Café Bizou at 30315 Canwood Street is the date-night standard for longtime residents, a French-California bistro that has maintained its following without needing to reinvent itself every few years.

The outdoor lifestyle infrastructure is exceptional for an urban-adjacent suburb. The Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area is effectively at the end of Chesebro Road, roughly two miles from the neighborhood core. Hikers have direct access to the Chesebro Canyon and Palo Comado Canyon trail systems, which together cover miles of oak woodland and grassland terrain with almost no car traffic. The National Park Service's SAMO website has current trail conditions and maps. Closer in, Reyes Adobe Park provides baseball diamonds, open lawn, and playground equipment that the elementary school crowd heavily uses on weekday afternoons and all weekend long.

Lake Lindero Market Snapshot

Lake Lindero operates as a micro-market within a micro-market. Agoura Hills itself is a small city of roughly 20,000 people with limited inventory at any given time, and Lake Lindero, as a defined sub-neighborhood, generates only a handful of transactions per year. That scarcity has a direct effect on pricing dynamics: well-prepared homes with current finishes and golf course adjacency tend to generate multiple offers quickly, while the unrenovated originals can sit longer as buyers mentally model the renovation cost into their offers. The price gap between a cosmetic original and a fully updated home on the same street can be $200,000 to $400,000, which creates real opportunity for buyers who are willing to take on a project.

The broader Agoura Hills market has shown some softening relative to the 2021 through 2023 peak cycle, which is consistent with the broader Conejo Valley correction. Median list prices in the area have moderated, and days on market have extended compared to the frenzied pace of two years ago. That said, Lake Lindero's desirability is structural, driven by the schools and the Country Club amenity, not by sentiment. Competitively priced homes with good presentation still move.

Metric Value
Current Median Price Approximately $1,000,000 to $1,100,000 (detached, all conditions)
Typical Days on Market 30 to 75 days depending on condition and pricing
Price Trend (Last 12 Months) Flat to modest softening; approximately 2% to 5% off peak
Typical Buyer Profile Move-up families, LVUSD school seekers, golf and lifestyle buyers
Inventory Level Tight; typically fewer than five active listings at any time

The negotiation dynamic in Lake Lindero right now is more balanced than it was in 2021 and 2022, which is actually better for buyers who want time to do proper due diligence. Sellers in pristine, turnkey condition can still attract multiple offers if they price correctly at the outset. Sellers who overprice expecting 2022 comps will sit. For buyers, the opportunity is in the homes that have been on the market thirty days or more at an aspirational price point: that's where meaningful negotiation is possible, and where a buyer who has done their inspection homework can get a meaningful concession toward remediation items. Lake Lindero homes run slightly below the broader Agoura Hills city-wide median when averaged across all conditions, but the fully renovated golf-view homes at the top of the range push well past city median and hold their value over time.

Who Should Look in Lake Lindero?

Families entering the LVUSD system for the first time. If the school district is driving your zip code decision, Lake Lindero puts you walking distance from Yerba Buena Elementary and Lindero Canyon Middle School, with Agoura High School a short drive away. The price entry point for a three-bedroom, two-bath original in livable condition can come in at or just above $800,000, which is one of the more accessible on-ramps into LVUSD in a detached single-family home. For families who have been stretching toward Westlake Village or North Ranch pricing, Lake Lindero is worth a very close look.

Move-up buyers from local townhome communities. I regularly work with buyers who have owned in Annandale, Chateau Park, or Meadow Ridge for five to eight years, built equity, and are now ready for a yard, a garage, and a neighborhood where their kids can ride bikes to school. Lake Lindero is the most natural move-up target for that buyer. The price jump is real but manageable, the lifestyle upgrade is immediate, and the community has a depth that attached communities simply can't replicate.

Lifestyle buyers who want the Country Club amenity without country club pricing. The Lake Lindero HOA membership provides access to a junior Olympic pool, four lighted tennis courts, and the on-site restaurant at Lake Lindero Country Club. That is a genuinely remarkable amenity set for a neighborhood at this price point. If you play golf, swim competitively, or have kids who do either, the case for Lake Lindero over a comparable home two miles away with no amenity becomes very strong very quickly.

Investors and owner-renovators seeking upside in a supply-constrained market. The spread between an unrenovated original and a finished showcase in Lake Lindero is wide enough to support a renovation thesis. If you can acquire a three-bedroom original at the low end of the range, execute a focused kitchen, bath, and systems update over six to nine months, and price correctly into a thin-inventory market, the math tends to work. I've seen it done well here multiple times. The key is buying the right house on the right street: the golf course adjacent and lake view addresses command a premium at sale that interior lots do not.

Pros and Cons of Lake Lindero

  • Pro: Las Virgenes Unified School District. Consistently ranked among the top public school districts in California, with strong elementary, middle, and high school options all close by.
  • Pro: Lake Lindero Country Club access. HOA membership includes use of the junior Olympic pool, four lighted hard-court tennis courts, and on-site dining at a Ted Robinson-designed 9-hole golf course.
  • Pro: Walkable within the neighborhood. Sidewalks throughout, Yerba Buena Elementary and Lindero Canyon Middle School both inside the neighborhood boundaries, and the golf course perimeter trail accessible on foot.
  • Pro: No gates, no guards, no pretense. Lake Lindero is a real neighborhood where people actually interact with their neighbors. The culture here is inclusive rather than insular.
  • Pro: Price range covers entry-level and high-end in the same tract. Buyers at $850,000 and buyers at $1,800,000 are shopping the same neighborhood, which means there's a path to upgrade within the community as equity grows.
  • Pro: Outstanding outdoor access. Chesebro Canyon trails, Reyes Adobe Park, and the Santa Monica Mountains are minutes from the neighborhood's edge.
  • Pro: Freeway proximity that actually works in your favor for commuting. The 101 Ventura Freeway is about a mile from the neighborhood center, making the commute to the San Fernando Valley or Westside functionally shorter than many comparable Conejo Valley tracts.
  • Pro: Strong long-term hold value. Limited new supply in Agoura Hills, combined with persistent school district demand, creates a durable floor under pricing over time.
  • Con: Freeway noise on southern-facing lots. Homes closer to the 101 corridor, particularly those backing to Canwood Street near the freeway, will have ambient traffic noise. It is not constant but it is audible, and buyers should visit on a weekday during commute hours before deciding.
  • Con: Older infrastructure in unimproved homes. Original homes from the late 1960s and 1970s frequently carry galvanized water supply lines, original electrical panels, and aging roofs. A proper inspection is essential and the remediation budget should be factored into your offer price.
  • Con: Limited on-street parking on cul-de-sacs. The curved streets and cul-de-sac configurations that make the neighborhood charming to drive can make parking tight during large gatherings or on busy weekends near the golf course entrance.
  • Con: Renovation fatigue in the mid-range. The middle of the price range, roughly $1,000,000 to $1,300,000, can contain homes that have been partially updated but not finished. Buyers need to look carefully at what has been done versus what remains.

Schools Serving Lake Lindero

  • Sumac Elementary School (Grades K through 5) serves portions of the surrounding Agoura Hills community.
  • Yerba Buena Elementary School (Grades K through 5) is located at 6098 Reyes Adobe Road, directly within the Lake Lindero neighborhood boundary.
  • Willow Elementary School (Grades K through 5) serves additional portions of the LVUSD attendance area in Agoura Hills.
  • Lindero Canyon Middle School (Grades 6 through 8) is located at 5844 Larboard Lane, also within the Lake Lindero neighborhood.
  • Agoura High School (Grades 9 through 12) is located at 28545 Driver Avenue, Agoura Hills.

All of the above schools are part of the Las Virgenes Unified School District, which is ranked among the nation's top public school districts and serves approximately 10,000 students across Agoura Hills, Calabasas, Hidden Hills, and Westlake Village. The district offers programs including AP Capstone, International Baccalaureate, Arts and Media Academy, and Dual Language Immersion. What parents consistently tell me about LVUSD is that the level of parent involvement is unusually high, the athletics and fine arts programs are genuinely competitive, and the high school college placement outcomes justify the premium that the school district adds to Agoura Hills real estate. For many buyers, LVUSD is not a perk. It is the reason they are buying in this zip code and no other. Private school options in the vicinity include Viewpoint School in Calabasas and Our Lady of the Valley Catholic School in Canoga Park, both within reasonable driving distance for families that prefer that path.

Nearby Amenities and Local Favorites

Grocery

  • Trader Joe's Agoura Hills (approximately 1.5 miles) on Kanan Road: locations.traderjoes.com
  • Albertsons (approximately 2 miles) on Thousand Oaks Boulevard at Cornell Road: full-service grocery with pharmacy and Starbucks inside.
  • Vons (approximately 2.5 miles) on Agoura Road, Westlake Village side: larger format, solid produce and deli department.

Coffee and Cafes

  • Starbucks on Kanan Road (approximately 1.5 miles): the daily default for most of the neighborhood. 5827 Kanan Road, Agoura Hills.
  • Bellini Bistro (approximately 1.2 miles): 30245 Canwood Street, Agoura Hills. A neighborhood café and wine bar that does double duty as a morning coffee stop and an evening glass-of-wine destination.
  • Emil's Bake House (approximately 2 miles): 5005 Kanan Road, Agoura Hills. Worth a Saturday morning drive for the pastries alone.

Restaurants

  • Jinky's Café (approximately 1 mile): 29001 Canwood Street. The neighborhood breakfast institution. Expect a wait on weekends and plan accordingly.
  • Café Bizou (approximately 1 mile): 30315 Canwood Street. French-California bistro, the go-to for a local date night or an out-of-town guest dinner.
  • Urbane Café (approximately 1 mile): 29145 Canwood Street. Build-your-own sandwiches and salads, fast and good.
  • Sage Plant Based Bistro and Brewery (approximately 2 miles): 5046 Cornell Road. The best plant-based dining option in the Conejo Valley by a meaningful margin.
  • Decker's Kitchen at Lake Lindero Country Club (walking distance from most streets): on-site restaurant with indoor and garden seating. Convenient for post-golf or post-swim meals without leaving the neighborhood.

Parks and Trails

  • Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area, Chesebro Canyon Trailhead (approximately 2 miles): nps.gov/samo. Miles of hiking and equestrian trails through oak woodland with very limited crowds compared to better-known trailheads.
  • Reyes Adobe Park (approximately 0.8 miles): baseball fields, open lawn, picnic areas, and playground equipment. The neighborhood's most-used park for families with young children.

Fitness

  • Lake Lindero Country Club Pool and Tennis (walking distance): lakelinderogolf.com/amenities. Six-lane junior Olympic pool and four lighted hard-court tennis courts available to HOA members.
  • Crunch Fitness Agoura Hills (approximately 2 miles): the primary big-box gym option for the surrounding area.

What to Expect When Buying in Lake Lindero

The first thing I tell buyers getting serious about Lake Lindero is that the market is thin and timing matters more here than it does in larger tracts. When a well-presented home comes to market at a reasonable price, it doesn't wait for you to think about it for two weeks. The LVUSD demand pool is large and motivated, and buyers who have done their homework, lined up their financing, and know what they want are the ones who close here. I've watched buyers lose homes in this neighborhood because they wanted one more weekend to think. Get pre-approved before you tour, and be ready to move within 48 to 72 hours of finding the right property.

On the inspection side, the late 1960s and 1970s vintage means you should approach every unrenovated home with a clear-eyed checklist. Galvanized steel water supply lines are the single most common finding in the original homes, and while they're not an immediate crisis, they're a budget item. Older electrical panels, sometimes 100-amp originals that haven't been upgraded, will need attention before most lenders will issue insurance. Roofs on homes that have been updated at least once since the 1990s are generally in acceptable shape, but anything original or showing its age should get a roofer's opinion during escrow, not after. The good news is that these are known quantities and experienced buyers factor them into their offers rather than blowing up escrow over them.

Appraisal risk is real in a thin-inventory neighborhood with a wide price range. When a renovated golf-view home sells at the top of the range and sets a new high for the street, the next buyer in line may encounter an appraiser who doesn't have comparable data to support that number. In those situations, I typically recommend that the buyer's agent prepare a detailed renovation value addendum for the appraiser with itemized improvement costs and photos. Lenders and appraisers respond well to documentation they don't have to hunt for themselves. Closing costs in California run roughly 1% to 1.5% of the purchase price for the buyer on top of the down payment, and commission structures are now negotiated separately under the NAR settlement framework, so buyers should budget for a buyer's agent compensation agreement conversation before going into escrow.

Frequently Asked Questions About Lake Lindero

Is Lake Lindero a good investment?

Yes, for buyers with a three-plus year time horizon. The combination of thin resale inventory, strong and persistent school district demand, and the Country Club amenity creates a structural floor under pricing that more generic tracts don't have. The highest-returning plays tend to be unrenovated homes purchased at the low end of the range with a focused renovation budget applied intelligently. That said, Lake Lindero is not a short-term flip market; transaction volume is too low and the buyer pool too specific to time exits aggressively.

Does Lake Lindero have an HOA? What does it include?

Yes. The Lake Lindero Homeowners Association (LLHOA) covers the neighborhood, and HOA membership provides access to the Lake Lindero Country Club amenities: a six-lane junior Olympic pool, four lighted championship tennis courts, and on-site dining at the Country Club restaurant. LLHOA members do not pay to use the pool for their household. The HOA dues are considered low relative to the amenity value being delivered. Always confirm current dues directly with the HOA or via the escrow process, as dues can change.

How are the schools in Lake Lindero?

Excellent, and that's not broker enthusiasm talking, that's the reason many buyers shortlist this neighborhood specifically. Las Virgenes Unified School District is ranked among the top public school districts in the state of California, with Agoura High School posting strong AP enrollment, athletic programs, and college placement results year after year. Lindero Canyon Middle School and Yerba Buena Elementary are both located inside the neighborhood itself, which means younger kids often walk to school.

Is Lake Lindero family-friendly?

Very much so. The neighborhood's demographics skew heavily toward families with school-age children, largely because the LVUSD schools are the primary draw. Halloween is one of the neighborhood's best nights of the year, Reyes Adobe Park is heavily used by families on weekends, and the walkability within the neighborhood makes it genuinely livable for kids who want independence without car travel. The Country Club pool also serves as an unofficial summer social hub for families with children.

How close is Lake Lindero to the 101 Freeway?

The 101 Ventura Freeway runs along the southern edge of the neighborhood, roughly half a mile to one mile from the neighborhood's interior streets depending on which address you're evaluating. On-ramps at Kanan Road and at Lindero Canyon Road are both under two miles from the neighborhood's core. That proximity is a genuine commute advantage, though it does mean that homes on the southern perimeter can hear freeway noise during high-volume traffic periods.

What is the commute from Lake Lindero to Los Angeles?

Plan for 35 to 50 minutes to most West Side destinations under normal conditions, and 45 to 65 minutes during peak morning or evening commute hours depending on your specific destination and the day's traffic pattern. The 101 Freeway connects directly to the Valley and through the Cahuenga Pass to Hollywood and beyond. Remote and hybrid work arrangements have made the commute question less binary for many buyers over the last several years, and the outdoor lifestyle available from Lake Lindero often tips the calculation in favor of the longer drive.

What golf course is Lake Lindero built around?

The neighborhood is built around Lake Lindero Golf Course, a 9-hole, roughly 2,000-yard executive course designed by Ted Robinson Sr., a prominent golf course architect who designed dozens of courses across California. The course is open to the public and also offers a driving range. HOA members receive access to the pool and tennis courts through their LLHOA membership. The club also operates Decker's Kitchen, an on-site restaurant, making it a full-service recreational amenity without requiring a long drive.

Are there homes for sale with golf course views in Lake Lindero?

Yes, and they represent the most sought-after addresses in the neighborhood. Streets like Slicers Circle, Sandtrap Drive, and sections of Lake Lindero Drive offer direct fairway or water-feature views from the backyard. These homes command a meaningful premium over interior-lot comparables and tend to move faster when priced correctly. If a golf course view is your priority, be prepared for a tighter pool of available homes at any given time and plan to act quickly when the right property appears.

Similar Communities to Lake Lindero

Lake Lindero occupies a fairly specific niche in the Agoura Hills market: detached single-family homes with a distinctive lifestyle amenity, strong school access, and a price range broad enough to accommodate both entry-level and move-up buyers. If you're finding that Lake Lindero isn't quite the right fit, whether because of budget, home size, lot preference, or lifestyle priority, the following communities in and around Agoura Hills are worth examining. Some offer more land, some offer higher-end finishes at a higher price point, and some offer an attached entry point for buyers not yet ready for a detached purchase.

  • Reyes Adobe — Similar because it is a detached, single-family Agoura Hills neighborhood in the same school district at a comparable price range, with a quieter residential character and close proximity to the same park and trail infrastructure.
  • Hillrise — Similar because it offers detached single-family homes in Agoura Hills within the same school district, with a slightly elevated price range that reflects larger lots and hillside positioning.
  • Morrison Ranch — Similar because it delivers LVUSD school access in a larger-lot, move-up format, appealing to the same family buyer who has outgrown Lake Lindero's lot sizes.