Ontario, CA β€” City Data, Demographics & Statistics

San Bernardino County Β· California

🧬

City DNA

A unique fingerprint for Ontario based on 8 key metrics β€” compared to averages.

PopulationIncomeHome ValueSafetyEducationMedian AgeClimateCost of Living
Ontario
National Avg
California Avg
Population: 76Income: 55Home Value: 57Safety: 100Education: 19Median Age: 55Climate: 50Cost of Living: 80

Quick Stats

Population

178,347

2023 ACS

Median Income

$82,806

2023

Median Home Value

$568,000

2023

Median Rent

$1,916

2023

Median Age

33.1

Unemployment

6.0%

Cost of Living Index

160.8

100 = national avg

Ontario is a city in San Bernardino County, California, with a population of 178,347 according to the 2023 American Community Survey. Ontario is one of the communities in California.

The median household income in Ontario is $82,806, and the median home value is $568,000. The cost of living index is 160.8 (where 100 = national average), and the median rent is $1,916 per month. The unemployment rate is 6.0%, and the median age is 33.1 years.

People & Demographics

Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023)

Population

Total Population

178,347

Male

87,327

49.0%

Female

91,020

51.0%

Median Age

33.1

Age Distribution

Education & Household

Bachelor's or Higher

13.4%

High School or Higher

30.6%

Foreign Born

27.2%

Veterans

2.4%

Married

36.6%

Avg Household Size

3.4

Marital Status by Age

Race & Ethnicity

Diversity Index

0.292

Simpson's Index (0-1)

Largest Group

White

29.4%

Foreign Born

27.2%

White
29.4%
Black
6.4%
Asian
8.6%
Native American
1.9%
Pacific Islander
0.3%
Two or More
24.7%
Other
28.8%

Hispanic/Latino Ethnicity

Hispanic/Latino is an ethnicity, not a race. People of any race can identify as Hispanic. This percentage overlaps with the racial categories above.

Hispanic/Latino

68.3%

121,757 people

Not Hispanic/Latino

31.7%

Hispanic/Latino Detail

Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023)
Mexican
105,030 (86.3%)
Puerto Rican
1,140 (0.9%)
Cuban
925 (0.8%)
Dominican
99 (0.1%)
Salvadoran
3,984 (3.3%)
Guatemalan
2,101 (1.7%)
Colombian
547 (0.4%)
Honduran
987 (0.8%)
Ecuadorian
530 (0.4%)
Peruvian
976 (0.8%)
Other Hispanic
5,437 (4.5%)

Asian Detail

Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023)
Asian Indian
1,008 (6.6%)
Chinese
5,196 (34.1%)
Filipino
5,007 (32.8%)
Vietnamese
1,038 (6.8%)
Korean
765 (5.0%)
Japanese
388 (2.5%)
Pakistani
240 (1.6%)
Cambodian
199 (1.3%)
Hmong
139 (0.9%)
Thai
115 (0.8%)
Laotian
14 (0.1%)
Taiwanese
267 (1.8%)
Other Asian
874 (5.7%)

Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islander Detail

Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023)
Native Hawaiian
108 (17.8%)
Samoan
64 (10.6%)
Chamorro
35 (5.8%)
Tongan
242 (39.9%)
Fijian
52 (8.6%)
Other Pacific Islander
114 (18.8%)

American Indian & Alaska Native Detail

Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023)
Navajo
34 (1.0%)
Choctaw
18 (0.5%)
Other Native American
3,284 (98.5%)

Languages Spoken

Total Speakers (5+)

166,532

English Only

46.2%

#1 Non-English Language

Spanish

77,037 speakers

Limited English

22.7%

Language Distribution

Spanish
77,037 (46.3%)
Chinese
4,142 (2.5%)
Tagalog
2,397 (1.4%)
Other Asian
1,810 (1.1%)
Other Indo-European
1,273 (0.8%)
Vietnamese
958 (0.6%)
Korean
549 (0.3%)
Other Languages
494 (0.3%)
Arabic
450 (0.3%)
German
269 (0.2%)

English Proficiency

Speaks English Very Well

77.3%

Limited English Proficiency

22.7%

Spanish
41.0% limited English
Chinese
68.7% limited English
Tagalog
34.8% limited English
Other Asian
33.5% limited English
Other Indo-European
35.2% limited English
Vietnamese
74.7% limited English
Korean
45.4% limited English
Other Languages
33.6% limited English
Arabic
48.7% limited English
German
21.6% limited English

Veterans & Military

Total Veterans

4,272

2.4% of population

Disability Rate

25.1%

1,074 with disability

Veteran Median Income

$51,157

Unemployment Rate

5.6%

Period of Service

Gulf War (2001+)
28.4%
Gulf War (1990-2001)
15.9%
Vietnam
34.7%
Korea
4.8%
World War II
0.9%

Veteran Age Distribution

18-34
15.6%
35-54
23.6%
55-64
22.5%
65-74
18.3%
75+
20.0%

Male Veterans

3,837

89.8%

Female Veterans

435

10.2%

Veteran vs Non-Veteran Income

Veteran Income

$51,157

Non-Veteran Income

$36,612

Difference

$14,545

39.7% higher

Disability Status

With Disability

1,074

Without Disability

3,198

Disability Rate

25.1%

Ancestry & Heritage

Total Reporting Ancestry

31,948

#1 Ancestry

German

3.1% (5,603)

#2 Ancestry

American

2.5% (4,524)

#3 Ancestry

Irish

2.4% (4,345)

Top 20 Ancestries

Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023)
German
3.1%
American
2.5%
Irish
2.4%
English
2.2%
Italian
1.4%
Dutch
0.6%
Sub-Saharan African
0.6%
European
0.6%
French
0.6%
Polish
0.5%
Arab
0.4%
Scottish
0.4%
Swedish
0.4%
Scotch-Irish
0.4%
Portuguese
0.4%
Norwegian
0.3%
West Indian
0.2%
Hungarian
0.2%
Welsh
0.2%
British
0.1%

Families & Households

Total Households

52,664

Family Households

41,136

78.1%

Married Couples

25,807

49.0%

Non-Family Households

11,528

21.9%

Single Mother Households

9,967

18.9%

Single Father Households

5,362

10.2%

Living Alone

8,513

16.2%

Children Under 18

Total Children

34,444

In Married Couple

22,795

66.2%

With Single Mother

8,221

23.9%

With Single Father

3,428

10.0%

Family Income

Median Family Income

$87,689

Married Couple Income

$104,126

Single Mother Income

$57,281

Single Father Income

$80,259

Avg Family Size

3.4

Avg Non-Family Size

3.3

Grandparents w/ Grandchildren

7,492

Grandparents Responsible

1,419

Economy

Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023)

Income Overview

Median Household Income

$82,806

+13% vs national

Per Capita Income

$31,141

-16% vs national

Poverty Rate

12.7%

-7% vs national

Gini Index

0.4044

0 = perfect equality

Unemployment

6.0%

+15% vs national

SNAP Recipients

12.5%

of households

How Ontario Compares

Ontario vs Similar Cities

Compared to cities with 100,000 - 250,000 residents. Ontario is highlighted.

Median Household Income

Per Capita Income

Poverty Rate

Unemployment Rate

πŸ“Š

Where Do You Stack Up?

Enter your household income to see how you compare to other households in Ontario. The median household income here is $82,806.

$

Income Distribution

<$25K
11.8%
$25-50K
14.5%
$50-75K
18.6%
$75-100K
13.6%
$100-150K
21.2%
$150-200K
11.2%
$200K+
9.1%

Employment Snapshot

Unemployment Rate

6.0%

-22% vs CA avg

Labor Force

92,126

Employed

86,625

How People Get to Work

Employment by Sector

Education & Workforce

Bachelor's Degree+

13.4%

of adults 25+

High School Diploma+

30.6%

of adults 25+

Median Age

33.1

Work from Home

7.3%

of workers

Cost of Living

Overall Index

160.8

100 = national avg

+60.8 vs national average

Living Wage (1 Adult)

$70,757

per year

Living Wage (Family of 4)

$167,244

per year

Cost Index by Category

Housing
232.4
Food
113.3
Transportation
126.6
Healthcare
110.6
Utilities
134.5

100 = national average. Higher = more expensive.

Fair Market Rent

Source: HUD

1 Bedroom

$1,777

per month

2 Bedroom

$2,201

per month

The median household income in Ontario, CA is $82,806, which is 13.1% above the national average of $73,224. Per capita income is $31,141. The poverty rate of 12.7% is lower than the CA state average of 13.0%. The Gini index of income inequality is 0.4044, where 0 represents perfect equality and 1 represents maximum inequality. The unemployment rate is 6.0%, compared to the state average of 7.6%. The labor force is 92,126. 13.4% of adults hold a bachelor's degree or higher. About 77.9% of workers drive alone to work. The overall cost of living index is 160.8, which is 60.8% above the national average. Housing costs are above the national average at an index of 232.4. A single adult needs to earn approximately $70,757 per year to cover basic expenses.

Housing & Real Estate

Market SnapshotRedfin β€” January 2026

Median Sale Price

$634,973

Median List Price

$659,000

Price Per Sq Ft

$418

Days on Market

67

Active Inventory

278

Months of Supply

3.8

Seller's market

Zillow Home Value

$661,303

ZHVI β€” January 2026

Zillow Rent Index

$2,462

ZORI β€” January 2026

Market CompetitivenessRedfin

Sold Above List

36.5%

Off Market in 2 Weeks

19.8%

Sale-to-List Ratio

99.2%

Buyer's market

Sold Above Asking
36.5%
Under Contract in 2 Wks
19.8%
Listings with Price Drops
24.1%

Price TrendsRedfin

Sale Price ↓ 1.6%List Price ↑ 2.2%Mar 24 β†’ Jan 26

Market ActivityRedfin

Homes Sold

74

New Listings

121

Pending Sales

111

Homes Sold ↓ 20.4%New Listings ↑ 36.0%Pending ↓ 11.9%Mar 24 β†’ Jan 26

Price Per Square FootRedfin

Median Sale $/SF

$418

Median List $/SF

$392

Sale $/SF ↓ 4.6%List $/SF ↓ 4.6%Mar 24 β†’ Jan 26

House Price IndexFHFA

How much have housing prices increased in Ontario, CA? According to the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) House Price Index for the Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA metro area, home prices have risen 557.1% over the past 40 years. Over 20 years, prices grew 60.9%. The 10-year growth rate is 102.9%. Over the last 5 years, prices increased 50.2%. In the most recent 2-year period, the index rose 6.5%. The FHFA HPI tracks average price changes in repeat sales or refinancings of single-family properties with conforming mortgages. Because this is a metro-level index, it reflects the broader Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA housing market rather than Ontario alone.

40yr ↑ 557.1%20yr ↑ 60.9%10yr ↑ 102.9%5yr ↑ 50.2%2yr ↑ 6.5%Q2 1976 β†’ Q4 2025

Metro area: Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA

Ontario vs Similar CitiesCensus ACS / Redfin

Compared to cities with 100,000 - 250,000 residents. Ontario is highlighted.

Median Home Value

Median Rent

Median Price Per Sq Ft

Rent Burden

Census Housing DataU.S. Census Bureau ACS 2023

Median Home Value

$568,000

Median Rent

$1,916

Total Housing Units

54,951

Vacancy Rate

4.2%

Owner Occupied

57.4%

Renter Occupied

42.6%

Median Property Tax

$3,384

per year

Monthly Cost (w/ Mortgage)

$2,037

Housing Types

Single Family
66.8%
Multi-Family
29.2%
Mobile Home
4.1%

Property TaxU.S. Census Bureau ACS 2023

Median Property Tax

$3,384

per year

Effective Tax Rate

0.60%

of home value

Median Home Value

$568,000

Estimated Mean Tax

$3,918

The effective property tax rate is calculated by dividing the median annual property tax ($3,384) by the median home value ($568,000). In Ontario, CA, this works out to an effective rate of 0.60%. This is below the national average of approximately 1.1%.

The current median sale price in Ontario, CA is $634,973 according to Redfin data. Homes spend a median of 67 days on the market. 36.5% of homes sold above asking price. The market has 3.8 months of supply. The median price per square foot is $418. Zillow's observed rent index is $2,462/month. About 57.4% of housing units are owner-occupied. The median year homes were built is 1980. There are 54,951 total housing units. Homeowners pay a median annual property tax of $3,384. The effective tax rate is 0.60%, below the national average.

Crime Overview

Source: FBI Crime Data Explorer (2024)

Violent Crime Rate

2.72

per 1,000 residents

+5% vs national

Property Crime Rate

18.17

per 1,000 residents

+6% vs national

Total Crimes

3,861

2024

Violent Clearance

56%

cases solved

Property Clearance

11%

cases solved

YoY Change

-20.0%

violent crime rate

improving vs 2023

How Ontario Compares

Source: FBI (2024)

Ontario vs Similar Cities

Source: FBI (2024)

Compared to cities with 100,000 - 250,000 residents. Ontario is highlighted in green.

Violent Crime Rate (per 1,000)

Property Crime Rate (per 1,000)

Murder Rate (per 1,000)

Crime Rate Trends

Source: FBI
Violent ↓ 15.3%Property ↓ 40.1%2015 β†’ 2024

Crime Composition

Source: FBI (2024)

Violent Crime Breakdown

Property Crime Breakdown

Crime Clearance (Solve) Rates

Source: FBI (2024)

Ontario police solve 75% of murder cases but only 5% of motor vehicle theft cases.

Weapon Used in Violent Crime

Source: FBI (2024)

Crime Breakdown

Source: FBI Crime Data Explorer (2024)
Crime TypeCategoryCountRate per 1KClearance %
MurderViolent40.0275.0%
RapeViolent810.4449.4%
RobberyViolent1430.7739.9%
Aggravated AssaultViolent2751.4965.5%
BurglaryProperty4412.3916.3%
Larceny/TheftProperty2,05711.1313.3%
Motor Vehicle TheftProperty8604.654.8%

Ontario, CA reported 503 violent crimes and 3,358 property crimes in 2024. The violent crime rate of 2.72 per 1,000 residents is 4.7% above the national average of 2.60 per 1,000. Law enforcement cleared 56% of violent crimes. Larceny/theft accounts for 2,057 of the property crime reports. Firearms were involved in 17.8% of aggravated assaults. Violent crime has been trending downward.

Crime History

Source: FBI
YearViolentPropertyViolent RateProperty Rate
20245033,3582.7218.17
20236154,1633.4023.04
20225823,8333.2321.29
20206883,9943.6721.31
20196594,2903.5923.40
20186704,5843.7725.82
20176834,4733.9125.60
20166024,7183.4927.33
20155475,1693.2130.36

Natural Hazard Risk

Source: FEMA National Risk Index

Risk Score

99.8

Very High

Expected Annual Loss

99.8

Score (0-100)

Social Vulnerability

33.2

Score (0-100)

Community Resilience

20.1

Score (0-100)

Scores range from 0 (lowest risk) to 100 (highest risk) relative to all U.S. communities. Data from FEMA National Risk Index.

Disaster History & Federal Spending

Source: FEMA

Total Declarations

60

Public Assistance

$295.2M

Individual Assistance

$14.0M

Most Common Type

Fire

32 declarations

Public Assistance by Category

Total: $295.9M
DisasterTypeDatePA $IA $
Bridge Fire β†’FireSep 2024β€”β€”
Line Fire β†’FireSep 2024β€”β€”
Severe Winter Storms, Straight-line Wind… β†’Severe StormApr 2023$3.7M$61K
Severe Winter Storms, Flooding, Landslid… β†’FloodMar 2023β€”β€”
Severe Winter Storms, Flooding, and Muds… β†’FloodJan 2023β€”β€”
Blue Ridge Fire β†’FireOct 2020β€”β€”
Wildfires β†’FireOct 2020$3.1M$25K
El Dorado Fire β†’FireSep 2020β€”β€”
Covid-19 Pandemic β†’BiologicalMar 2020$196.0M$12.9M
Covid-19 β†’BiologicalMar 2020β€”β€”
Hillside Fire β†’FireOct 2019β€”β€”
Earthquakes β†’EarthquakeJul 2019β€”β€”
Blue Cut Fire β†’FireAug 2016β€”β€”
Pilot Fire β†’FireAug 2016β€”β€”
North Fire β†’FireJul 2015β€”β€”
Hill Fire β†’FireSep 2011β€”β€”
Severe Winter Storms, Flooding, and Debr… β†’FloodJan 2011$43.1Mβ€”
Severe Winter Storms, Flooding, and Debr… β†’Severe StormMar 2010$2.1Mβ€”
Sheep Fire β†’FireOct 2009β€”β€”
Pendleton Fire β†’FireSep 2009β€”β€”

Showing 20 of 68 disasters

PA = FEMA Public Assistance (infrastructure recovery). IA = Individual Assistance (homeowner/renter aid).

Flood Insurance (NFIP)

Source: FEMA NFIP

Total Claims

864

Total Claims Paid

$9,619,846

Avg Claim Payout

$11,134

County-level NFIP data from FEMA National Flood Insurance Program.

Hazard Mitigation

Source: FEMA Hazard Mitigation Assistance

Mitigation Projects

86

Federal Funding

$108,428,210

Properties Protected

679

Avg Benefit-Cost Ratio

4.71

BCR

Top Mitigation Project Types

Project TypeProjectsFederal $
401.1: Water and Sanitary Sewer System Protective Measures12$4,459,499
91.1: Local Multihazard Mitigation Plan8$478,794
300.2: Vegetation Management - Wildfire7$3,726,609
205.6: Structural Retrofitting/Rehabilitating Public Structures - Seismic7$78,227,348
403.1: Stormwater Management - Culverts5$581,703

Federally funded projects to reduce future disaster risk. Only includes completed or obligated projects.

Ontario has a very high overall natural hazard risk rating according to FEMA's National Risk Index. The top hazard risks are landslide, wildfire, earthquake. The area has had 60 federal disaster declarations. The most common disaster type is fire (32 declarations). 864 flood insurance claims have been filed in the area. FEMA has obligated $295,200,414 in public assistance recovery funding. $14,025,245 has been distributed in individual assistance to disaster-affected residents. 86 hazard mitigation projects have been funded to reduce future risk.

Health

Community Health

Source: CDC PLACES

Obesity Rate

33.6%

2.5pp below the national average

Depression Rate

19.2%

4.3pp below the national average

Diabetes Rate

12.0%

near the national average

Uninsured Rate

17.0%

6.4pp above the national average

Health Scorecard

Higher scores indicate better health outcomes relative to the national average (50 = average)

Health Outcomes

Age-adjusted prevalence rates. Green bars indicate rates below the national average; red indicates above.

High Cholesterol

33.0%

Arthritis

19.6%

Cancer (excl. skin)

4.6%

Teeth Lost (65+)

11.9%

Health Risk Behaviors

Prevention & Screening

Green bars indicate rates above the national average (more preventive care); red indicates below.

Mental Health & Wellbeing

Frequent Mental Distress

17.8%

14+ days in past month

Depression

19.2%

Loneliness

39.2%

Lack of Support

31.5%

Disability Prevalence

Any Disability

31.7%

Mobility

14.0%

Cognitive

17.1%

Hearing

5.3%

Vision

7.3%

Self-Care

4.5%

Independent Living

9.1%

Health-Related Social Needs

Prevalence of social risk factors affecting community health

Ontario has an obesity rate of 33.6%, which is 2.5pp below the national average. The depression rate is 19.2%, 4.3pp below the national average. About 17.0% of adults lack health insurance. 68.3% of residents had an annual checkup in the past year.

Nearby Hospitals

Source: CMS Hospital Compare

Nearest Hospitals

5

With Emergency Services

4

Avg CMS Rating

2.8 / 5

Nearest Hospital

5.0 mi

Chino Valley Medical Center

Loading map…
HospitalDistanceTypeRatingER
Chino Valley Medical Center5.0 miAcute Care Hospitals2/5Yes
Canyon Ridge Hospital5.0 miPsychiatricβ€”β€”
San Antonio Regional Hospital5.7 miAcute Care Hospitals3/5Yes
Montclair Hospital Medical Center5.9 miAcute Care Hospitals3/5Yes
Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center8.3 miAcute Care Hospitals3/5Yes

Climate & Environment

Water Systems

Source: EPA SDWIS

Water Systems

3

Pop. Served

185,010

Violations (5yr)

0

No violations

System NamePop. ServedViolations (5yr)
ONTARIO MUNICIPAL UTILITIES COMPANY185,0100
CHINO BASIN DESALTER AUTH. - DESALTER 2β€”0
CHINO BASIN DESALTER AUTH. - DESALTER 1β€”0

Greenhouse Gas Emitters

Source: EPA GHGRP (2023)

Facilities Reporting

3

Total COβ‚‚e

300.1K MT

Top Emitter

New-Indy Ontario, LLC

207.4K MT COβ‚‚e

Total COβ‚‚e vs Similar Cities (100,000 - 250,000)

FacilitySectorCOβ‚‚e (MT)
New-Indy Ontario, LLC
New-Indy Jv Corp
Pulp and Paper207,410
LINDE ONTARIO CA
Linde Inc
Chemicals70,757
MILLIKEN SANITARY LANDFILL
San Bernardino County Solid Waste Management Div
Waste21,894

Data from EPA Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program (GHGRP). Includes facilities emitting 25,000+ metric tons COβ‚‚e/year.

There are 3 water systems serving the area. 3 industrial facilities report greenhouse gas emissions totaling 300.1K metric tons of COβ‚‚e.

Infrastructure

Commute Overview2023 ACS

Drive Alone

77.9%

-1% vs national

Public Transit

1.1%

+18% vs national

Work From Home

7.3%

-22% vs national

Carpool

11.7%

Walk / Bike

1.3%

combined

How Ontario's Commute ComparesCensus ACS 2023

How People Get to WorkCensus ACS 2023

Commute Mode BreakdownCensus ACS 2023

Traffic Fatalities

Source: NHTSA FARS (2023)

Fatalities

20

2023

6-Year Avg

21

fatalities/yr

Pedestrian

5

Cyclist

2

Nighttime

12

dark conditions

YearCrashesFatalitiesAlcoholPedestrianCyclist
20232020052
20221819031
20212829072
20201821661
20191010331
20182728982

Data from NHTSA Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS). Includes only crashes involving at least one fatality.

Commute data for Ontario, CA covers travel times and transportation modes. 77.9% of workers drive alone, compared to the national average of 78.7%. 7.3% work from home, which is below the CA state average of 14.0%. Public transit is used by 1.1% of commuters, compared to the national average of 0.9%. 11.7% of workers carpool. 1.0% walk to work. In 2023, there were 20 traffic fatalities from 20 fatal crashes. 5 were pedestrians.

Internet & Broadband Access

Source: Census ACS

Broadband Access

93.8%

of households

Cable / Fiber / DSL

76.4%

of households

No Internet

4.5%

of households

Total Households

52,664

Internet Subscription Types

Cable, Fiber, or DSL
76.4%
Cellular Data Plan
88.7%
Satellite
10.3%
Cellular Only (no wired)
12.2%
No Internet Access
4.5%

Device Ownership

Source: Census ACS

Has Computer

97.5%

of households

Smartphone

94.7%

of households

Desktop / Laptop

83.1%

of households

Tablet

65.0%

of households

Any Computing Device
97.5%
Smartphone
94.7%
Desktop / Laptop
83.1%
Tablet
65.0%
Smartphone Only
9.8%
No Computer
2.5%

Percentage of households with each device type. Data from the U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023 5-year estimates, tables B28001 & B28002).

Electricity Rates

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration (2024)

Residential Rate

32.0Β’

per kWh

+87% vs 100,000 - 250,000 avg

Commercial Rate

25.5Β’

per kWh

+89% vs 100,000 - 250,000 avg

Industrial Rate

21.5Β’

per kWh

+119% vs 100,000 - 250,000 avg

Avg Monthly Bill

$161

residential

+13% vs 100,000 - 250,000 avg

87% above the national average of 17.1Β’/kWh

Residential electricity in California averages 32.0Β’ per kWh, compared to the national average of 17.1Β’. The average monthly electric bill is $161. State-level averages from EIA Electric Sales & Revenue data (2024).

Ontario vs Similar Cities

Source: EIA (2024)

Comparing electricity rates with randomly selected cities of similar population (100,000 - 250,000). Each city represents its state's average rate.

Residential Rate (Β’/kWh)

Commercial Rate (Β’/kWh)

Industrial Rate (Β’/kWh)

Average Monthly Bill

Water Systems

Source: EPA SDWIS

Water Systems

3

Population Served

185,010

Violations (5yr)

0

System NameTypeSourcePop. ServedViolations
ONTARIO MUNICIPAL UTILITIES COMPANYCommunityPurchased surface water185,0100
CHINO BASIN DESALTER AUTH. - DESALTER 2CommunityGround water00
CHINO BASIN DESALTER AUTH. - DESALTER 1CommunityGround water00

93.8% of households in Ontario have broadband internet access. 76.4% have cable, fiber, or DSL service. 12.2% rely solely on cellular data without a wired connection. 4.5% of households have no internet access. 9.8% use only a smartphone without a desktop or laptop. The area is served by 3 water systems, providing water to 185,010 people. No water quality violations have been reported in the past 5 years.

Politics & Government

County-level data: Election results are reported at the county level. Ontario is located in San Bernardino County, CA. Results reflect all voters in the county, not just those in Ontario.

Election Overview

Source: San Bernardino County (2024)

2024 Winner

Republican

Dem Votes

362,114

47.5%

GOP Votes

378,416

49.7%

Total Votes

761,714

Margin

R+2.1%

Shift from 2020

R+12.8pp

vs prior election

πŸ“ŠElection Results by Year
2016–2024
πŸ“ˆPartisan Lean Trend
R+2.1%

Election History

Source: County-Level Election Results
YearDem VotesGOP VotesTotalDem %GOP %Margin
2024362,114378,416761,71447.5%49.7%R+2.1
2020455,859366,257840,93154.2%43.5%D+10.7
2016312,517253,962598,78352.2%42.4%D+9.8

In the 2024 presidential election, San Bernardino County recorded 761,714 total votes. Republicans won the county with 49.7% of the vote compared to 47.5% for Democrats, a margin of R+2.1%. Compared to 2020, the margin shifted R+12.8pp from the previous election. Since 2016, San Bernardino County has shifted 11.9 percentage points toward Republicans.

Public Records Request

Source: ontarioca.gov

Submit a public records request to Ontario β€” Uses GovQA portal.

Source: ontarioca.gov

Nonprofits Overview

Source: IRS Exempt Organizations BMF

Total Nonprofits

444

Total Assets

$2.5B

Total Income

$1.4B

Per 10K Residents

24.9

nonprofits

-42.8% vs peers avg

Orgs with >$1M Assets

31

Median Assets

$113K

Oldest Active

1940

ruling year

Newest Org

2025

ruling year

Nonprofits by Category

Source: IRS / NTEE Classification
Religion
96
Education
51
Human Services
49
Arts & Culture
25
Recreation & Sports
25
Youth Development
17
Philanthropy
13
Community Improvement
12
Health Care
11
Mental Health
9
Animal-Related
7
Public Benefit
7
Food & Agriculture
6
International
5
Employment
4
Crime & Legal
3
Housing & Shelter
3
Environment
2
Voluntary Health
2
Mutual Benefit
2
Medical Research
1
Public Safety
1
Civil Rights
1
Social Science
1
Unknown
1
97.4%of all nonprofit assets are held by the 10 largest organizations

Top 10 hold $2.5B of $2.5B total

Nonprofit Size Distribution

Source: IRS Exempt Organizations BMF

Number of nonprofits by total asset size

When Were Nonprofits Founded?

Source: IRS Ruling Date

Number of currently active nonprofits by founding decade

Nonprofits per 10K Residents vs Similar Cities

Source: IRS BMF + Census ACS

Compared to cities with population 100,000 - 250,000

Largest Nonprofits in Ontario

Source: IRS Exempt Organizations BMF
OrganizationCategoryAssetsIncomeEst.IRS
PRIME HEALTHCARE FOUNDATION INCHealth Care$2.1B$1.1B2015
REAL JOURNEY ACADEMIES INCEducation$133.8M$63.3M2011
UNICARE COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER INCEducation$47.8M$41.6M2003
REAL JOURNEY ACADEMIES FOUNDATION INCEducation$37.0M$3.2M2015
INLAND CHRISTIAN HOME INCHuman Services$30.7M$16.2M1973
ONTARIO CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATIONEducation$29.9M$20.5M1952
MARK H & BLANCHE M HARRINGTON FOUNDATIONβ€”$19.9M$10.9M1958
AMPAC TRI-STATE CDC INCCommunity Improvement$18.7M$7.2M2006
BENSON HOUSE INCCommunity Improvement$9.8M$26.3M1995
INLAND SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 211Philanthropy$6.1M$24.2M1971
ANTHESIS SERVICESEmployment$5.6M$8.3M1966
ONTARIO CHRISTIAN SCHOOL FOUNDATIONβ€”$4.1M$3.4M1968
BUILDING BRIDGES FOSTER FAMILY AGENCYHuman Services$3.5M$9.1M2014
SPORTING CALIFORNIA INCRecreation & Sports$3.2M$4.2M2022
FUTURO INFANTIL HISPANOUnknown$3.1M$3.5M1994
WAREHOUSE WORKER RESOURCE CENTEREmployment$2.9M$3.0M2013
INLAND EMPIRE UNITED WAYPhilanthropy$2.8M$655K1996
INLAND CHRISTIAN HOME FOUNDATION INCHuman Services$2.7M$148K1992
SICKLE CELL DISEASE FOUNDATION OF CALIFORNIAVoluntary Health$2.7M$3.5M1967
WEST END FAMILY COUNSELING SERVICEMental Health$2.5M$5.9M1963
HUMANE SOCIETY OF THE CHAFFEY COMMUNITY INCAnimal-Related$2.3M$2.1M1959
DIVINE TRUTH UNITY FELLOWSHIP CHURCHReligion$2.3M$3.6M1997
LESTER B MILLARD TESTAMENTARY TRUSTβ€”$1.8M$565K1963
HMC DESIGNING FUTURES FOUNDATIONEducation$1.7M$247K2009
WESTERN CUNA MANAGEMENT SCHOOLEducation$1.6M$2.1M1999
ONTARIO-MONTCLAIR SCHOOLS FOUNDATIONEducation$1.6M$278K2012
SUMMER PLACE INCHuman Services$1.6M$1.3M1992
INLAND FAIR HOUSING AND MEDIATION BOARDCrime & Legal$1.6M$1.7M1987
SCPGA FOUNDATION INCEducation$1.5M$5.4M1995
JOHN JACK PICK TRUST 1015028906Philanthropy$1.3M$657K2008
D K KIM FOUNDATION INCPhilanthropy$1.3M$987K2003
NEW LIFE YOUTH FOUNDATION INCYouth Development$924K$12004
CARDENAS MARKETS FOUNDATIONEducation$769K$1.1M2007
INLAND EMPIRE ECONOMIC PARTNERSHIP FOUNDATIONCommunity Improvement$750K$72K1997
KHALID E PAREKH FOUNDATION INCPhilanthropy$739K$625K2025
UNIDOS POR LA MUSICAHuman Services$690K$1.2M2011
RICHARD MYLES JOHNSON FOUNDATIONEducation$683K$657K1966
ALICE COLBY WHEELER SCHOLARSHIP FUND 1020003308Education$602K$200K1974
DOWNTOWN ONTARIO IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATIONCommunity Improvement$570K$482K2020
MALO MOTIVATING ACTION LEADERSHIP OPPORTUNITYArts & Culture$551K$376K2018
JENNEH FARMSHuman Services$500K$232K2020
SOCIETY FOR VECTOR ECOLOGYEnvironment$499K$167K1991
PASADENA AREA OPERA TRUSTArts & Culture$457K$168K1973
NEW CREATION BEHAVIORAL HEALTHCARE FOUNDATIONMental Health$450K$1.2M2015
CHAFFEY HIGH SCHOOL ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONβ€”$438K$357K1993
M I PART-NORS FINANCIAL SERVICESCommunity Improvement$393K$52K2017
IGLESIA LA NUEVA GETSEMANIReligion$368K$118K2015
HHMC FOUNDATIONPhilanthropy$346K$440K2021
ABOVE THE REST ACADEMYHuman Services$318K$429K2021
HUERTA DEL VALLEFood & Agriculture$313K$463K2014

Ontario, CA has 444 registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit organizations with combined assets of $2.5B. The most common category is Religion-Related, with 96 organizations. 31 nonprofits have assets exceeding $1 million. That works out to 24.9 nonprofits per 10,000 residents. The oldest active nonprofit dates back to 1940.

SBA Lending Overview

Source: SBA FOIA Loan-Level Data

Total SBA Loans

1,697

Total Approved

$1.1B

Jobs Supported

24,647

Per 10K Residents

95.2

SBA loans

+43.2% vs peers avg

Unique Lenders

188

Top Lender

U.S. Bank, National Association

168 loans

Top Industry

Wholesale Trade

Data Span

1992–2026

Loan Program Breakdown

Source: SBA FOIA
7(a)75% of all loans

Loans

1,277

Total Amount

$701.4M

Avg Loan

$549,285

Median Loan

$243,000

SBA Guaranteed

$525.7M(75%)

Jobs Supported

16,059

50425% of all loans

Loans

420

Total Amount

$396.4M

Avg Loan

$943,855

Median Loan

$672,000

7(a) β€” 75%504 β€” 25%

Recent Activity (Last 5 Years)

Source: SBA FOIA

Recent Loans

285

17% of all-time total

Recent Amount

$254.2M

23% of all-time total

Avg Recent Loan

$891,892

Top Industries Funded

Source: SBA FOIA / NAICS Codes
Wholesale Trade333 loans
NAICS 42
$280.9M
Retail Trade172 loans
NAICS 44
$96.0M
Manufacturing166 loans
NAICS 33
$115.4M
Construction126 loans
NAICS 23
$53.1M
Accommodation & Food Services124 loans
NAICS 72
$136.1M

SBA Loans per 10K Residents vs Similar Cities

Source: SBA FOIA + Census ACS

Compared to cities with population 100,000 - 250,000

Top SBA Borrowers

Source: SBA FOIA
BusinessLoansAmount
A & D Electronics Llc6$7.6M
Jcm Engineering Crop4$7.2M
Paper 360 Inc.3$7.1M
Sol Hospitality Llc2$6.0M
Ate Investment Llc2$5.6M
Hyatt Place Ontario Mills1$5.5M
Abid Hameed Khan M.d. a Professional Corporation3$5.1M
Full Spectrum Solutions Llc3$5.1M
Estrada Investment Group, Llc4$5.1M
Reed Printing, Inc.1$5.1M

Ontario, CA has received 1,697 SBA loans totaling $1.1B in approved funding between 1992 and 2026. The 7(a) program accounts for 1,277 loans (75% of the total), supporting 16,059 jobs. The 504 program, focused on real estate and large equipment, has funded 420 loans totaling $396.4M. The most common industry receiving SBA funding is Wholesale Trade. The most active SBA lender in Ontario is U.S. Bank, National Association with 168 loans. That works out to 95.2 SBA loans per 10,000 residents.

ZIP Code Overview

Source: Census ACS

ZIP Codes

23

Total Population

1,212,252

Avg Median Income

$104,080

Avg Home Value

$649,235

ZIP Code Details

Source: Census ACS
ZIP CodePopulationMedian IncomeHome ValueMedian RentArea (sq mi)
9170138,597$113,576$718,800$2,2327.4
9170817,308$104,242$642,500$2,7128.1
9170978,200$122,784$829,900$2,75044.8
9171080,186$104,205$645,200$2,00222.0
9171137,538$121,970$870,300$2,13514.9
9173071,692$89,654$595,400$2,24013.7
9173722,797$116,903$843,500$2,26310.1
9173941,722$141,475$860,200$2,50828.4
9175237,551$113,450$647,600$2,02215.1
9176162,506$97,396$590,000$2,01528.5
9176263,656$76,289$568,700$1,75214.3
9176337,515$77,627$550,000$1,7675.3
9176455,412$75,605$524,100$2,0397.9
9176668,673$77,699$568,300$1,77610.1
9176750,308$80,201$585,100$1,7495.7
9178426,900$157,118$853,900$2,7909.1
9178655,519$86,961$607,100$1,9238.9
9233595,295$75,198$433,600$1,63617.5
9233736,944$104,936$519,400$2,12013.7
9250553,063$84,528$520,800$1,93610.2
9250980,149$95,218$501,200$1,69830.7
9286025,268$125,371$732,600$1,89314.1
9288075,453$151,445$724,200$2,59626.2

Ontario, CA has 23 ZIP codes with a combined population of 1,212,252. The average median household income across all ZIP codes is $104,080. The average median home value is $649,235. The average median monthly rent is $2,111.

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