Coverage analysis
What 15 minutes on foot covers in Los Angeles.
Los Angeles is the canonical case study for why drive-time matters more than distance. A 5-mile straight-line radius can translate to a 12-minute drive at 10am and a 55-minute drive at 5pm, and any trade-area study that ignores this is effectively fiction.
At 15 minutes on foot, the Los Angeles walk-time isochrone captures the standard walk shed — the standard walk shed used in transit planning and urban design — where trips are intentional but still comfortably on foot. Unlike a simple ≈ 1.2 km radius circle, the real pedestrian-network polygon follows Los Angeles's actual street grid, accounts for crossings, parks, and dedicated walk paths, and contracts sharply around freeways, rail corridors, and waterways that break pedestrian continuity.
Walk-shed area at 15 minutes: ≈ 1.0–3.0 km² — larger in grid cities, compressed by barriers and dead-ends. The 15-minute isochrone is the standard input for transit-oriented development studies, 15-minute city planning, and urban retail site selection.
The city-level population of 3,979,576 and a median household income of $65,290 give a sense of Los Angeles's density, but the figure that matters for walkable-retail siting is the population inside the pedestrian polygon — not the city as a whole. That number shifts dramatically depending on whether you're anchored in a high-density urban core or a lower-density neighbourhood where blocks are long and crossings are scarce. Use the tool above to set your actual candidate address, then generate the isochrone to see the real walk shed.