About the Village

Oak Park, Illinois was officially incorporated as a village under Illinois law on Jan. 25, 1902.

Village of Oak Park Articles of Incorporation(PDF, 2MB)

Today, Oak Park is a thriving community of about 54,500 people located immediately west of the City of Chicago and known for its architectural heritage and diverse population. Within its 4.7 square miles live one of the region's most diverse mixes of cultures, races, ethnicities, professions, lifestyles, religions, ages and incomes.

General Information & Demographics

  • 4.7 square miles
  • Incorporated January 25, 1902
  • Population 54,583 (2020 Census)
  • Median age 36 (24.1% under 18; 10.7% over 65)
  • - 67.7% white
    - 21.7% black
    - 5.8% Hispanic
    - 5.0% Asian, American and Alaskan Indians

Financial Information

  • 10% sales tax rate (2.25% on qualifying food/drugs)
  • 13.514% Property Tax Rate (2.062% municipal government share - or 15% of collections) - Tax year 2015
  • Bond rating – Moody’s A1; Standard & Poor’s AA

Police Department

Government

  • Home Rule Authority
  • Elected Village President, six Village Trustees and Village Clerk
  • Appointed Village Manager

Health Care Services

Libraries

Parks & Recreation Facilities

  • 7 recreation centers
  • 18 parks (2 outdoor swimming pools and 1 indoor skating rink)
  • 1 plant conservatory

More about the Oak Park Park District 

Utilities

Tourism Information

Find information about local tourism on the Visit Oak Park website.

Places of Worship

The Community of Congregations is an interfaith organization serving the areas of Oak Park and River Forest, as well as surrounding communities. 

Education - Public

Travel Distances

  • 10 miles to O’Hare International Airport 
  • 8 miles to Midway Airport 
  • 9 miles to Downtown Chicago

Public Transportation

History

The modern roots of Oak Park date back to 1835 when Joseph and Betty Kettlestrings came from Yorkshire, England and built a small frame house near Lake Street and Harlem Avenue. The Kettlestrings later sold parcels of their large land holdings to people who followed the first train to run west of Chicago - the Galena & Chicago Union Railroad built in 1848. The railway station was eventually named Oak Park to match the post office. Oak Park became the official name of the area, but was still unincorporated and officially part of Cicero Township until 1902, when it was incorporated as the Village of Oak Park(PDF, 2MB). More details on Oak Park’s history are posted on the Historical Society website.