The suburb extends from the south-west of Vardys Road and Sunnyholt Road, with the north-east adjacent the Glenwood, Bella Vista and Baulkham Hills areas.
Homely, a real estate website, gave an overall score of 9.4/10 and ranked it the 14th-best suburb in Sydney.[2]
History
Early settler Matthew Pearce (1762-1831) called his 160-acre (65 ha) land grant after Kings Langley Manor House in Hertfordshire, England, where he was said to have been born. Pearce’s grant was situated on the opposite side of the Old Windsor Road to the present day suburb of Kings Langley. A housing scheme used the name in the 1970s. It was recognised as a "neighbourhood" in 1976 and classified as a suburb in 1987.[3]
Transport
Kings Langley is well served by public transport, including Hillsbus routes 661, 706, 715, 705 and Busways routes 743 and 718. Those bus routes connect it with the larger suburbs of Blacktown, Castle Hill, Seven Hills, Westmead and Parramatta.
The suburb is served by Joseph Banks and Troubadour bus stations on the North-West T-way, providing connections to North Sydney (602X), Sydney CBD (607X, 607N), Rouse Hill (663, 664, 665), Castle Hill (662), Norwest (664) and Parramatta (660-665) as well as James Cook station on the Blacktown- Parklea T-way, providing services to Blacktown (730-735), Castle Hill (730), Rouse Hill (731, 735) and Schofields (734).
Kings Langley has two shopping centres. Kings Langley Shopping Centre is located on James Cook Drive and includes both a Coles and a Woolworths Supermarket, as well as many specialty stores. the smaller Solander Centre has a convenience store, Speedway petrol station and several specialty stores. Kings Langley is close to both Blacktown Hospital and the Norwest Private Hospital.
According to the 2021 census of Population, there were 9,354 people in Kings Langley.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people made up 1.0% of the population.
69.8% of people were born in Australia. The next most common countries of birth were India 3.6%, England 3.0%, China 2.5%, New Zealand 1.6% and Philippines 1.0%.
73.5% of people spoke only English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Mandarin 3.2%, Cantonese 1.5%, Tamil 1.3%, Spanish 1.2% and Arabic 1.2%.
The most common responses for religion were Catholic 29.7%, No Religion 27.0% and Anglican 14.7%.
Unemployment was recorded at 3.8%.
Median family income was $2,694 per week compared to the Australian median of $2,120.[1]