How to know if a school is considered a walking school?
our current elementary school is not considered a walking school so there are no crossguards or bike racks. It's a neighborhood school but i guess the roads are too busy. ok fine, whatever. We want to be in a walking neighborhood. I am looking at homes but am unsure how to know that aside from calling the school and I don't want to call a hundred schools. What are the like requirement for calling a school a walking school?
Asked by Todd J | King of Prussia, PA| 04-24-2026| 12 views|Schools|Updated 5 days ago
Todd, the only sure-fire way to find out is to call the schools or the town board of education and they will have the certainty you are looking for. To minimize the calls, you would want to only call schools that have homes of interest that are in walking distance to the schools that also avoid major highways or thoroughfares. Best of luck with your home search!
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There's no universal definition. It's up to each school district, and they decide based on distance, traffic, and whether routes are safe. Some districts say under a mile is walking distance, others have different rules.
Check the school district's website or transportation policy. A lot of them have maps or zone info that shows which areas get busing and which don't. That'll tell you if a house is in a walking zone.
You can also ask your realtor to help. They can reach out to the district or check with other parents in the area. Or just look on Google Maps - if the school's close and there are sidewalks and crosswalks, it's probably walkable. But yeah, the district makes the final call.
Todd- Usually the school district will have a website for all the aspects of the school, including where there would be bus service and which neighborhoods (or streets) would be within walking distance. Here is the Andover, North Andover, Boxford, MA area, the website for the school shows every street, which school they are assigned to and if they are outside the 1.5 mile walking radius. The walking radius has sidewalks but the crossing guards are closer to the school entrance. See if your town organizes it that way. Also, remember, if school choice exists in your King of Prussia area, that this may have an affect on how they determine "walking neighborhoods". Good luck!
A “walking school” isn’t usually an official label—it’s more of a practical designation based on whether students can reasonably and safely walk to school. Here’s how you can tell if a school fits that description:
1. Distance from homes
Most districts consider a school “walkable” if students live within a certain range—commonly:
Elementary: ~0.5 to 1 mile
Middle/High: ~1 to 1.5 miles
If many students fall inside that radius, it’s often treated as a walking school.
2. School district transportation policy
Check the district’s busing rules. If they don’t provide buses within a certain distance, that’s a strong signal it’s considered a walking zone.
3. Sidewalks and infrastructure
A true walking school typically has:
Continuous sidewalks
Crosswalks and crossing guards
Low to moderate traffic roads
No sidewalks or high-speed roads nearby usually means it’s not realistically walkable—even if it’s close.
4. Actual student behavior
What are kids doing in the morning?
Lots of foot traffic = walking school
Heavy car lines/buses = less walkable
Real-world behavior often tells you more than policy.
5. Local designation or programs
Some towns formally support walking through initiatives like Safe Routes to School National Partnership. If a school participates, it’s a good sign walkability is a focus.
6. Safety considerations
Districts may classify areas as “non-walk zones” due to:
Lack of sidewalks
Dangerous intersections
Railroads, highways, or blind curves
Even short distances can be deemed unsafe.
My take on this is;
A school is essentially a “walking school” if the district expects students to walk (based on distance rules) and the surrounding area actually supports it safely.
If you’re looking at this from a real estate angle, I can help you evaluate a specific property or school zone—it’s one of those details buyers care about more than they realize.
You can contact me and we can determine the walkability together