Best Restaurants and Shopping in Northridge

by Roman & Liana Shersher

Best Restaurants and Shopping in Northridge

Northridge doesn't have the polish of The Village at Westfield Topanga in Woodland Hills 91364 or the concentrated density of Sherman Oaks 91403's Ventura Boulevard restaurant corridor. What it has instead is something more textured and more authentic — a dining and retail landscape shaped by the cultural diversity that California State University, Northridge brings to the neighborhood, the working-family character of a genuine SFV residential community, and a commercial infrastructure that rewards exploration over Instagram optimization.

The buyers who move to Northridge 91324 and 91325 and give the neighborhood's food and shopping scene a serious try — rather than defaulting to 20-minute drives to Sherman Oaks or Woodland Hills for everything — consistently discover a more compelling local landscape than the neighborhood's reputation prepares them for. The Persian food scene alone justifies the neighborhood for a specific kind of food-focused buyer. The CSUN-adjacent café culture has real independent operators. The farmers market is a genuine community institution. And the Northridge Fashion Center delivers practical retail infrastructure that covers daily needs without requiring a freeway.

This guide covers all of it — by corridor, by food category, by shopping destination, and with the honest assessment of what Northridge delivers on its own terms versus what requires a drive to adjacent SFV cities.

1. 🍽️ The Northridge Dining Scene — Authentic, Diverse, and Underrated

The single most significant thing to understand about Northridge's restaurant culture is that it is genuinely diverse in a way that reflects the neighborhood's population rather than a curated commercial vision. The Persian and Middle Eastern food scene, the Armenian restaurant community, the Mexican restaurant density, the Korean dining options, and the Central American food that surfaces throughout Northridge's residential commercial streets — these are not trend-driven openings. They are restaurants that have earned loyal neighborhood followings over years and decades by serving food that the communities who live here actually eat.

 The Reseda Boulevard dining corridor through Northridge 91324 reflects the neighborhood's authentic cultural diversity — Persian, Armenian, Mexican, Korean, and American cuisines concentrated on one of the Valley's most genuinely multicultural restaurant streets, shaped by the communities who live here rather than by commercial curation.

The Reseda Boulevard corridor — the Northridge dining spine:

Reseda Boulevard running north-south through Northridge 91324 is the neighborhood's primary commercial and dining spine — a working commercial street with the density and authenticity that chain-homogenized retail corridors don't produce. The most relevant stretch for dining runs from Plummer Street north to Chatsworth Street.

Persian and Middle Eastern — Northridge's strongest food category:

The Persian and Middle Eastern dining scene in and around Northridge is one of the most significant concentrations of authentic Persian food accessible from any SFV residential neighborhood. The Persian community that has established itself in Northridge 91324 and 91325 — and in adjacent Reseda 91335 and Chatsworth 91311 — has produced a restaurant culture that food-focused residents specifically cite as a reason they prefer Northridge to other SFV cities.

What the Northridge Persian food scene delivers:

  • → 🍢 Kabob houses: Multiple authentic Persian kabob restaurants within or immediately adjacent to Northridge — lamb, chicken, and beef kabob preparations on lavash with saffron rice, grilled tomato, and fresh herbs that require no modifications to be exceptional
  • → 🍲 Stew and slow-cooked specialties: Ghormeh sabzi, fesenjan, ash reshteh — the Persian stew and slow-cooked tradition that requires the patience and community knowledge that the Northridge Persian dining scene has built over decades
  • → 🥐 Persian bakeries and sweets: Baklava, rice cookies, saffron ice cream, and the Persian pastry tradition that provides a distinctly different dessert culture from the standard American and Italian options that dominate many SFV commercial corridors

Mexican and Central American:

Northridge's Mexican restaurant scene reflects both the neighborhood's significant Mexican-American community and the proximity to broader Valley Mexican food traditions. From casual taquerias to sit-down family restaurants, the Mexican dining option in Northridge covers the full range:

  • → 🌮 Taquerias: Authentic street taco format — al pastor, carne asada, carnitas — in multiple informal and sit-down versions throughout the Northridge 91324 commercial corridors
  • → 🫔 Burritos and combination plates: The casual American-Mexican format that feeds weeknight family dinner needs throughout the neighborhood
  • → 🌶️ Oaxacan and regional Mexican: The increasing presence of regional Mexican food from Oaxaca, Jalisco, and other states that reflects both the community's actual origins and the growing sophistication of the neighborhood's food palate

Korean and Asian dining:

The Korean and broader Asian dining landscape in Northridge reflects the neighborhood's proximity to the San Fernando Valley's Korean community concentration and the CSUN student population that brings food diversity to the surrounding streets:

  • → 🥩 Korean BBQ: Multiple Korean BBQ options accessible from Northridge 91324 and 91325 — the table-grill format with banchan, galbi, and samgyeopsal that has established a passionate following among Northridge residents who discovered it through CSUN or through the broader Valley Korean food scene
  • → 🍜 Ramen and noodle houses: Multiple ramen and Korean noodle options within the Northridge commercial area and in adjacent Reseda 91335 streets accessible in 5–8 minutes
  • → 🥡 Vietnamese and Thai: The broader Southeast Asian dining representation that the CSUN community and the Valley's diverse population produces in the Northridge commercial corridor

American and casual dining:

Beyond the international food scene, Northridge's everyday casual dining infrastructure covers the full range of neighborhood needs:

  • → 🍔 Burger and casual American: Multiple independent burger spots and casual American restaurants that serve the family dinner and weekend lunch market
  • → 🍕 Pizza: Multiple pizza options from New York-style to California-style, including independent operators that have built neighborhood followings distinct from chain alternatives
  • → 🥗 Health-conscious and fast casual: The CSUN student influence produces a concentration of healthy fast casual options — grain bowls, wraps, salad bars — that serves the lunch and quick dinner market throughout the CSUN-adjacent Northridge 91324 streets

2. ☕ Café Culture and Coffee — The CSUN Influence

The café and coffee culture in Northridge 91324 is meaningfully shaped by California State University, Northridge — a university with 40,000+ students, a significant faculty and graduate student population, and the study-café demand that university communities consistently generate. The result is a concentration of independent coffee shops and study-friendly café environments in the CSUN-adjacent streets of west Northridge 91324 that is unusual for a Valley neighborhood of Northridge's density and price profile.

The CSUN café ecosystem:

The CSUN campus itself contains multiple dining and coffee options — but the more interesting café landscape exists in the surrounding streets where independent operators have established the community coffee shop experience that university neighborhoods produce in cities from Berkeley to Austin:

  • → ☕ Independent coffee shops with study-friendly environments: Long communal tables, reliable Wi-Fi, pour-over and espresso programs, and the extended-stay culture that makes these spaces genuinely different from Starbucks or Coffee Bean franchise locations
  • → 🧃 Bubble tea and specialty drinks: The CSUN student population's enthusiasm for bubble tea, matcha lattes, and specialty Asian-influenced beverages has produced multiple dedicated shops in the CSUN-adjacent Northridge streets — options that buyers relocating from urban neighborhoods consistently appreciate
  • → 📚 Bookshop and café combinations: The CSUN adjacency produces a small but genuine book-and-café culture that doesn't exist at the same scale in other Northridge sub-neighborhoods — a quality-of-life detail that academic and arts-oriented buyers specifically appreciate

Ventura Boulevard accessible dining:

The Ventura Boulevard commercial corridor — while the heart of it runs through Tarzana 91356, Sherman Oaks 91403, and Woodland Hills 91364 rather than through Northridge — is accessible from Northridge 91324/91325 in 15–20 minutes and serves as the Northridge resident's primary access to the higher-density restaurant corridor that Ventura offers. Northridge residents who want the Sherman Oaks or Woodland Hills restaurant density for special occasions have it as an occasional destination without needing to relocate.

3. 🛍️ Shopping — The Northridge Fashion Center and Beyond

The Northridge shopping landscape is anchored by one of the San Fernando Valley's most significant indoor retail centers and supplemented by a commercial corridor that covers the practical retail needs of a large and diverse residential community.

 The Northridge Fashion Center at Reseda Boulevard and Nordhoff Street is the eastern San Fernando Valley's primary indoor retail anchor — serving Northridge 91324/91325 and the broader corridor from Van Nuys through Chatsworth 91311 with Nordstrom, Macy's, and a full national retail roster.

Northridge Fashion Center:

Located at the intersection of Reseda Boulevard and Nordhoff Street in the heart of Northridge 91324, Northridge Fashion Center is the eastern San Fernando Valley's primary enclosed shopping destination. For Northridge residents, it provides the department store anchors, national retail brands, and full-service shopping infrastructure that residents of Sherman Oaks 91403 access at Westfield or residents of Woodland Hills 91364 access at Westfield Topanga — but from a location that is 5–15 minutes from most Northridge 91324/91325 addresses rather than 20–30 minutes.

What the Fashion Center delivers:

  • → 🛍️ Nordstrom and Macy's: The full-service department store anchors that provide clothing, shoes, cosmetics, and home goods at every price tier
  • → 👔 National retail roster: The standard national brand complement — Gap, H&M, Victoria's Secret, Bath & Body Works, and the full roster of mall retail that covers most practical shopping needs
  • → 🍽️ Mall dining: A collection of mall dining options including chain restaurants and fast casual — functional for post-shopping meals, not a dining destination on its own terms
  • → 🎬 Entertainment options: The Fashion Center area includes entertainment and activity venues that serve the family leisure market — anchoring the mall as a weekend destination beyond pure retail

The Reseda Boulevard commercial corridor:

Beyond the Fashion Center, the Reseda Boulevard corridor through Northridge provides the full range of everyday retail and services that residential community life requires:

  • → 🛒 Grocery: Multiple grocery options across the price and quality spectrum — from Vons and Ralphs for standard grocery shopping to specialty and ethnic markets that reflect the neighborhood's diverse population. The Armenian, Persian, and Latin grocery markets that appear in the Northridge commercial corridor provide ingredient access for home cooking that typical chain grocery stores don't.
  • → 💊 Pharmacy and health services: Full pharmacy coverage with multiple CVS, Walgreens, and independent pharmacy options throughout the Northridge 91324 commercial area
  • → 🔨 Home improvement: Multiple hardware and home improvement options in the Northridge commercial corridor — essential for the significant share of Northridge residents who are renovating 1960s–1970s homes
  • → 👗 Specialty and ethnic retail: The cultural diversity of Northridge produces specialty retail — Persian clothing, Korean beauty, Latin fashion, Middle Eastern grocery — that commercial corridors in more homogenized SFV neighborhoods don't contain

Grocery and specialty food shopping:

  • → 🥦 Northridge Whole Foods (adjacent area): The nearest Whole Foods to most Northridge 91324/91325 addresses is in Woodland Hills 91364 at The Village — 20–25 minutes. Trader Joe's has a location more accessible to Northridge. Sprouts serves the health-conscious grocery market in the Northridge area.
  • → 🫓 Ethnic specialty grocery: The Persian, Armenian, Korean, and Latin specialty grocery stores in and around Northridge provide ingredients and prepared foods that national chain grocery stores don't stock — a genuine quality-of-life advantage for residents who cook from these culinary traditions

4. 🌸 The Northridge Farmers Market — Community Institution

The Northridge Farmers Market is one of the most consistently cited quality-of-life features by Northridge residents who discover it — a genuine community institution that functions as both food shopping and neighborhood social infrastructure in a way that differentiates Northridge from SFV cities that lack a well-established weekly market.

What the Northridge Farmers Market delivers:

  • → 🥦 Strong produce selection: Local and regional farm produce — seasonal vegetables, fruits, and specialty items that reflect the California agricultural calendar and that chain grocery stores don't prioritize
  • → 🍞 Artisan food vendors: Bread, pastry, prepared foods, honey, olive oil, and specialty food producers that provide the market-sourced food experience that food-focused buyers specifically value
  • → 🌺 Local vendors and community character: The Northridge Farmers Market has the community gathering energy that the best SFV farmers markets produce — familiar faces, vendor relationships that develop over months of regular attendance, and the informal social infrastructure that turns a shopping errand into a neighborhood experience
  • → 📅 Verify current schedule: Operating days, hours, and location should be verified directly with the market organizers — farmers market schedules occasionally shift seasonally

The farmers market as lifestyle indicator:

For buyers evaluating Northridge's lifestyle quality relative to Sherman Oaks 91403 or Woodland Hills 91364, the quality of the farmers market is often a meaningful data point — one that reflects the neighborhood's food culture investment and community engagement in a way that restaurant density alone doesn't capture. The Northridge Farmers Market consistently performs as a genuine neighborhood anchor rather than a tourist-optimized commercial event.

5. 🎭 Entertainment, Community, and Beyond

The lifestyle infrastructure in Northridge 91324 and 91325 extends beyond dining and retail — CSUN's cultural programming, the neighborhood's sports and recreation infrastructure, and the specific entertainment options that serve a diverse residential community all contribute to a daily quality-of-life picture that buyers evaluating the neighborhood should understand.

 California State University, Northridge contributes cultural programming, arts events, athletic venues, and the ongoing energy of an active university community to the Northridge lifestyle landscape — a quality-of-life supplement that no other SFV city of Northridge's price profile replicates.

CSUN as community lifestyle infrastructure:

California State University, Northridge's presence in Northridge 91324 provides community lifestyle benefits that extend well beyond the student and faculty population:

  • → 🎭 Arts and cultural programming: CSUN's performing arts venues — the Valley Performing Arts Center (VPAC) is one of the San Fernando Valley's premier concert and performance venues — host national and regional performing arts events that Northridge residents access without driving to downtown LA or the Westside
  • → ⚽ Athletic events: CSUN's Division I athletics program — baseball, soccer, basketball, and other sports — provides accessible live sports entertainment at university pricing that is meaningfully different from professional sports cost and parking logistics
  • → 📚 Library and educational resources: CSUN's Oviatt Library is accessible to community members for research and study — a quality-of-life resource that book-oriented and academically-minded buyers specifically value
  • → 🏃 Recreation facilities: CSUN's recreation center and athletic facilities are accessible to some community members — verify current community access policies directly with the university

Entertainment beyond CSUN:

  • → 🎬 Cinema: Multiple movie theater options within Northridge 91324 and 91325 — serving the practical movie-going needs of the neighborhood without requiring a drive to Woodland Hills or Sherman Oaks
  • → 🎮 Family entertainment: Multiple family entertainment venues in the Northridge commercial area — bowling, arcade, mini-golf, and activity-based entertainment that serves families with children across age ranges
  • → 🏌️ Golf: Porter Valley Country Club is accessible from north Northridge 91325 — providing private club golf access that premium north Northridge residents utilize regularly

🚫 What NOT to Overdo

Don't move to Northridge expecting the dining density of Sherman Oaks 91403 or The Village at Woodland Hills 91364 to be replicated locally. Northridge's dining and retail scene is strong, authentic, and genuinely diverse — but it is not as concentrated or as polished as the curated lifestyle corridors of Sherman Oaks or Woodland Hills. Buyers who move to Northridge and evaluate the local dining scene on Sherman Oaks terms will be consistently disappointed. Buyers who evaluate it on Northridge terms — authentic diversity, genuine neighborhood character, accessible price points — will be consistently pleased.

Don't overlook the Persian and Middle Eastern dining scene because it's unfamiliar. The Persian food culture in and around Northridge 91324 is one of the neighborhood's genuine lifestyle advantages — not one that requires cultural familiarity to enjoy. A first visit to a Northridge Persian kabob house for a first-time Northridge resident is frequently the beginning of a dining relationship that becomes part of their weekly food rotation. The accessibility and authenticity of the Persian dining experience in Northridge is a feature that residents from the Westside and other areas consistently discover with genuine excitement.

Don't underestimate the CSUN cultural programming. Buyers who are attracted to Northridge for its price point and deprioritize the CSUN factor as irrelevant to their lifestyle frequently discover that the Valley Performing Arts Center programming, the CSUN athletics schedule, and the general energy that a university campus brings to a neighborhood are genuine quality-of-life additions. The VPAC specifically hosts concerts, comedy, dance, and theatrical performances that would require a trip to downtown LA or the Westside from any other SFV residential neighborhood.

Don't assume the Northridge Farmers Market is a small neighborhood affair. The Northridge Farmers Market has grown into a genuine community institution with strong produce selection, real artisan food vendors, and the kind of weekly community energy that characterizes the best SFV markets. Buyers who dismiss it based on Northridge's suburban reputation are consistently surprised by the quality and community character they find on their first Saturday morning visit.

🏠 Real-World Scenario — Northridge 91324

A buyer couple relocating from Koreatown had built their entire Los Angeles food life around the Korean restaurant density of their neighborhood — Korean BBQ, Korean fried chicken, jjigae houses, banchan shops. They were evaluating Northridge 91324 and were genuinely concerned about whether the food culture would support their cooking and dining habits.

We took them to the Northridge area on a Saturday morning — starting at the farmers market for the community feel, then lunch at a Persian kabob house on Reseda Boulevard, then a coffee walk through the CSUN-adjacent café corridor. We ended with a drive past the Korean BBQ options in the northern Reseda 91335 commercial corridor accessible from Northridge in 8 minutes.

Their assessment: the Korean dining density wasn't Koreatown. But the Persian food scene was something they hadn't experienced at this quality outside of Westwood-adjacent Persian restaurants that required a 35-minute drive from their prior address. The farmers market was better than anything in Koreatown's immediate area. The CSUN café culture felt genuine rather than manufactured.

They bought in Northridge 91324. The food life they built in Northridge is different from Koreatown — more diverse in cuisine type, more neighborhood-rooted in character, and anchored by a Persian dining scene that they now describe as one of their favorite food discoveries in Los Angeles. The Korean BBQ they drive 12 minutes to in Reseda 91335. Everything else is within the neighborhood they chose to call home.

🏠 Real-World Scenario — Northridge 91325

A buyer who had been renting in Encino evaluated Northridge 91325 with specific dining and lifestyle concerns — she had been a regular at Sherman Oaks 91403's Ventura Boulevard restaurants and worried about losing that access. Her primary lifestyle anchor was a specific Italian restaurant and two independent coffee shops that had become part of her weekly routine.

We addressed the concern honestly: the Northridge local dining scene would not replicate Sherman Oaks' Ventura Boulevard density within the neighborhood. What Northridge would offer was a different dining culture — more authentic, more diverse, more food-culture-specific — plus a 20-minute drive to Sherman Oaks when the Ventura Boulevard restaurants were what she specifically wanted.

We also showed her what the Northridge area offered that Sherman Oaks didn't: the Persian kabob dinner that became her new Friday night default. The farmers market that she now attends weekly. The CSUN adjacent bakery that made the best pan dulce she'd found in the Valley. And the Korean BBQ in adjacent Reseda 91335 that she'd discovered on a recommendation from a Northridge neighbor.

She bought in Northridge 91325. She drives to Sherman Oaks for the Italian restaurant once a month. The rest of her food week is entirely Northridge and adjacent — and she describes the overall food experience as richer and more interesting than it was in Encino, not poorer.

❓ FAQ

What is the best restaurant in Northridge? The Northridge dining scene doesn't have a single standout "best restaurant" in the way that a curated lifestyle corridor might — its strength is category depth and cultural authenticity rather than a marquee name. The strongest category in Northridge is Persian and Middle Eastern food — multiple restaurants in and immediately around Northridge 91324 serve authentic Persian kabob, stew, and pastry at a quality level that rivals the best Persian restaurants in Westwood and the Westside. For the most consistently cited Northridge dining experience, start with the Persian kabob houses on and around Reseda Boulevard.

Is Northridge good for food shopping? ✓ For everyday grocery needs — yes. Vons, Ralphs, and Trader Joe's all serve the Northridge 91324/91325 market. ✓ For ethnic and specialty grocery — yes, and this is one of Northridge's strongest food shopping advantages: Persian, Armenian, Korean, and Latin specialty markets provide ingredient access that chain grocery stores don't. ⚠️ For premium specialty grocery (Whole Foods, Erewhon, Bristol Farms) — these require a 20–25 minute drive to Woodland Hills 91364 or Sherman Oaks 91403. Northridge residents who specifically prioritize premium specialty grocery supplement local shopping with occasional drives to adjacent markets.

How does Northridge's dining scene compare to Sherman Oaks 91403? Sherman Oaks 91403 has more concentrated restaurant density and more polished independent dining along the Ventura Boulevard corridor — a greater number of options within a smaller geographic footprint and a more curated overall commercial character. Northridge has more authentic cultural diversity — the Persian, Armenian, Mexican, and Korean dining that reflects the actual community population — at more accessible price points. For buyers who prioritize authenticity and cultural diversity over commercial polish, Northridge's dining scene is competitive. For buyers who specifically want the Ventura Boulevard curated restaurant corridor, Sherman Oaks remains the superior local option — but at a purchase price typically $150,000–$300,000 higher for comparable homes.

Is the Northridge Fashion Center a good shopping destination? ✓ For practical retail needs — yes. Nordstrom, Macy's, and the full national retail roster cover clothing, shoes, home goods, and standard shopping needs for the Northridge 91324/91325 residential community. ⚠️ As a lifestyle shopping destination — it is functional rather than aspirational. For buyers who specifically value the open-air lifestyle retail experience (The Village at Westfield Topanga in Woodland Hills 91364, The Americana at Brand in Glendale), the Fashion Center doesn't replicate that experience. It delivers the practical department store and national retail infrastructure that every residential neighborhood needs.

Does CSUN affect the restaurant and café scene in Northridge? ✓ Meaningfully yes — particularly in the CSUN-adjacent streets of west Northridge 91324. The university's student and faculty population creates demand for independent coffee shops, study-friendly café environments, bubble tea and specialty drink shops, and the culturally diverse food options that university communities consistently generate. The CSUN influence is most visible in the café culture and in the diversity of quick-service dining options in the blocks immediately surrounding campus.

What farmers markets are near Northridge? The Northridge Farmers Market is the primary local market — verify current operating days and hours directly with the market. Additional farmers market options accessible from Northridge within 15–20 minutes include markets in Sherman Oaks 91403, Woodland Hills 91364, and Granada Hills 91344 — giving Northridge residents multiple market options on different days of the week without significant drive times.

Are there good options for health-conscious eating in Northridge? ✓ Yes — the CSUN student population's health consciousness has produced multiple healthy fast casual options in the CSUN-adjacent commercial area. Sprouts serves the health-focused grocery market in the broader Northridge area. The farmers market provides fresh local produce. And the Persian and Middle Eastern food tradition — heavy on grilled proteins, fresh herbs, and vegetable-forward preparations — aligns naturally with many health-conscious eating patterns without requiring a trip to a premium specialty restaurant.

🎯 Bottom Line

The Northridge dining and shopping scene is not Sherman Oaks 91403 on Ventura Boulevard. It is not The Village at Westfield Topanga in Woodland Hills 91364. It is something more specific, more authentic, and more interesting on its own terms — a food and retail landscape shaped by the cultural communities who have chosen to live in Northridge 91324 and 91325 over decades, supplemented by the CSUN influence that creates a café and entertainment infrastructure unusual for a Valley neighborhood at this price profile.

The Persian and Middle Eastern dining scene is the strongest argument for Northridge food culture — genuinely exceptional at multiple price points, accessible within the neighborhood, and distinct from what most comparable SFV residential neighborhoods offer. The farmers market is a real community institution. The Fashion Center delivers practical retail infrastructure. And the CSUN cultural programming — the Valley Performing Arts Center, the athletics events, the campus energy — provides a quality-of-life supplement that residents consistently underestimate until they've lived here long enough to use it.

For Northridge buyers who approach the neighborhood's lifestyle on its own terms rather than comparing it unfavorably to Sherman Oaks, the food and retail experience consistently exceeds expectations. The high-end specialty grocery run to Woodland Hills 91364 is 20 minutes. The Ventura Boulevard special occasion restaurant is 20 minutes. Everything else — the daily dinner, the Saturday farmers market, the Sunday afternoon kabob, the CSUN concert, the Monday morning coffee in a genuine neighborhood café — is right here.

At Parkway Estate Properties, every Northridge buyer conversation we have includes the lifestyle reality — not just the financial analysis. Liana's work with buyers across Northridge 91324/91325, Sherman Oaks 91403/91423, Woodland Hills 91364/91367, and Tarzana 91356 means she can give you an honest comparison of what each neighborhood delivers for your specific lifestyle priorities — without the pitch.

📩 Want to Experience the Northridge Lifestyle Before You Commit?

Let's schedule a Saturday morning neighborhood tour — farmers market, the Reseda Boulevard dining corridor, a CSUN campus walk, and an honest conversation about whether the Northridge lifestyle fits what you're looking for.

Contact Liana Shersher at Parkway Estate Properties: 📧 liana@parkwayestate.com · 📞 (818) 208-5881 · 🌐 parkwayestate.com 15021 Ventura Blvd., Ste. 510, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403

About the Authors

Liana Shersher Liana Shersher is a licensed real estate agent with Parkway Estate Properties Inc. and an Accredited Buyer's Representative (ABR) serving the San Fernando Valley — with a focus on Sherman Oaks, Encino, Tarzana, Woodland Hills, and Northridge (DRE# 02164224). Liana guides first-time homebuyers through every step of the purchase, from the first showing to the keys in hand, and represents move-up and repeat buyers across the Valley. For sellers, she builds the pricing and marketing strategy that positions a home to sell for top dollar, fast. Buyers and sellers work with Liana for clear communication, sharp local knowledge, and an agent who treats their goals like her own.

Roman Shersher Roman Shersher is the broker-owner of Parkway Estate Properties Inc. and a real estate investor with 18 years of experience in the San Fernando Valley (DRE# 01855095). Roman has personally led or co-led renovations on dozens of properties across the Valley, including recent projects in Northridge (91324) and Woodland Hills (91364). That hands-on renovation and investment experience shapes every pricing conversation and days-on-market strategy at Parkway — sellers get a realistic read on what improvements actually return at resale, and buyers get an expert eye on a home's true condition and upside.

Parkway Estate Properties, Inc. 15021 Ventura Blvd., Ste. 510, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403 · (818) 208-5881 · parkwayestate.com · Broker License #: 01873092 Equal Housing Opportunity. Information herein is general and not legal, tax, or financial advice. Consult qualified professionals for your specific situation.

 

Roman & Liana Shersher
Roman & Liana Shersher

Broker | Realtor ® | License ID: 01873092

+1(818) 208-5881 | info@parkwayestate.com

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