Mountain Park, Georgia
Seal of Georgia
Mountain Park · Cherokee County, Georgia
Population 583
Source: Census ACS 2023

Mountain Park, Georgia

Cherokee County, Georgia · Population 583

Mountain Park sits in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in northern Cherokee County, roughly 30 miles north of Atlanta. It occupies a narrow strip of land along the eastern shore of Lake Allatoona — not the sprawling lakefront development common elsewhere in the region, but a quiet, incorporated city of fewer than 600 people that has retained its character precisely because of its size. Most of its neighbors know it as the kind of place people move to once and stay. The median age of 52.5 confirms that impression. This is not a starter community. It is a destination.


People & Demographics

The ACS 2022 estimates put Mountain Park's population at 959 — the city's official Census count and the 583 figure reflect different measurement points, but the community remains small by any measure. Cherokee County as a whole holds 266,620 people, making Mountain Park a fraction of one percent of county population.

The population skews older and predominantly white: 915 of 959 residents identify as white, with 19 Black residents, 11 Hispanic or Latino, and no Asian residents counted in the survey period. The median age of 52.5 is well above typical suburban Atlanta communities. Of 415 total households, 304 are family households. Average household size is 2.31. There are 181 children under 18 in town — a relatively low share for a community this size, which tracks with the older age profile.


Economy & Employment

Mountain Park's median household income of $130,208 is well above both the Georgia state median (roughly $61,000) and Cherokee County's already-above-average figures. Per capita income runs $70,479. Only 41 residents fall below the poverty line.

Of 581 people in the labor force, just 15 are unemployed — a tight labor market by any standard. What stands out is how people work: of 559 total workers, 267 work from home, compared to 221 who drive alone and 66 who carpool. No residents reported using public transit. Mountain Park is a remote-work community to a degree that would have seemed unusual a decade ago. The town has no significant commercial or industrial base of its own; residents largely work in Atlanta's broader economy without commuting into it daily.


Housing

Mountain Park is overwhelmingly owner-occupied. Of 415 occupied units, 379 are owner-occupied and just 36 are renter-occupied. Vacancy is low: 23 of 438 total units sit empty.

The median home value is $323,700 — elevated for rural Georgia, though in line with what lakefront proximity and a high-income resident base produce. Median rent data is not available for this community. Anyone looking to rent here will find few options; this is functionally a homeowner enclave.


Schools

Mountain Park falls within Cherokee County Schools. Students attend a district that operates some of the largest high schools in the state. The high school options in the county include:

Middle schools include E. T. Booth (1,654 students), Teasley (1,606), Creekland (1,511), Dean Rusk (1,473), Mill Creek (1,333), and Woodstock Middle (1,083).

Elementary schools in the district include Little River (1,272), Woodstock Elementary (1,145), and Avery Elementary (1,128).

Cherokee County runs a large, well-funded district. For a town of Mountain Park's size, the breadth of school options nearby is notable.


Getting Around

Mountain Park is a car-required community. No public transit exists. Two residents walked to work. The dominant pattern — 267 working from home and 221 driving alone — means that for many residents, the commute question is largely moot. When driving is necessary, Canton and Woodstock are the nearest commercial hubs. Atlanta's northern suburbs are accessible via GA-140 and I-575.

The aggregate commute time across all 559 workers is 8,555 minutes, suggesting an average one-way trip of roughly 15 minutes for those who do leave — a short commute by metro Atlanta standards.


Natural Hazards

Cherokee County has a long and varied history of federal disaster declarations. The county has been touched by:

Lake Allatoona itself is managed by the Army Corps of Engineers partly for flood control. Residents should be aware that tropical remnants regularly reach this far inland with meaningful rainfall and wind, and that ice storms can be severe in the foothills even when metro Atlanta escapes them.


Education Attainment

Among Mountain Park's 731 residents aged 25 and older, the educational profile is striking. 356 hold bachelor's degrees, 79 hold master's degrees, and 23 hold doctorates. Only 40 residents report a high school diploma as their highest credential. This is an unusually credentialed small town — a reflection of the income profile and remote-work population.


Government & Municipal Code

Mountain Park is an incorporated city with its own municipal code, published through Municode: https://library.municode.com/ga/mountain_park

The town does not have a building code on file in the available data. Residents undertaking construction or renovation should verify applicable county and state standards directly.


References


The law belongs to the people. Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, 590 U.S. (2020)