Welcome To

the Peninsula

The Peninsula region of the San Francisco Bay Area lies immediately south of the City and County of San Francisco — reaching from its famous neighbor to the north into the high-tech region of Silicon Valley. San Mateo County is the main county in the Peninsula region. While many of the Peninsula’s residents work and play to the north or south, the Peninsula has its attractions, including some beautiful wilderness areas.Though the Peninsula technically extends from the Pacific Ocean to the San Francisco Bay, in practical use, it more commonly refers to the Bay side of the area. It contains few major cities or ports and the Santa Cruz Mountains divide the region in half north-south, with a large wilderness area that’s great for hiking and mountain biking.

Diversity At Its Finest

The Peninsula offers the best combination of local lifestyle, with offerings from glitz to wilderness trails and beaches, and proximity to San Francisco and the tech savvy of the Silicon Valley.Comprising a large chunk of Silicon Valley, the Peninsula is often associated with tech and innovation, but those who call it home know there’s much more to the area, from Pacifica’s captivating coastline to Redwood City’s chic town square and Palo Alto’s renowned cultural institutions. Residents of the Peninsula can expect a multitude of restaurants of all flavors as well as expansive opportunities for work and play.

Real Estate Insights

The San Francisco Bay Area, which includes all nine counties of Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Napa, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Solano, and Sonoma, posted an increase of 35% over last year’s sales for single-family homes. With the market this hot, the Peninsula offers prospective buyers a lot to choose from. Whether you’re looking for city living or wide open spaces and larger lots, unlike San Francisco and San Jose, a buyer can still find anything in their range.Mortgage rates are projected to rise and so are home prices. Experts are forecasting buyer demand will remain strong as people try to capitalize on rates and prices before they climb, creating another strong year for home sales. Let’s connect so you can make your best move in the new year.

Insider Tips

The character of the cities and towns dotting the Peninsula varies greatly. There are slices of suburbia where tract housing and big-box stores are prevalent, more rural locales with a small-town feel and everything in between. Most are considered family-friendly, with many offering well-regarded public and private schools and easy access to parks and recreational facilities. Downtowns and business plazas are filled with retailers, restaurants and offices, and cultural attractions range from quirky (the 92-foot-tall wind harp in South San Francisco by Lucia and Aristides Demetrios) to world-renowned (the Rodin Sculpture Garden at Stanford). Mid-century architecture buffs should keep an eye out for modernist residences by Henry Doelger (which populate the Westlake neighborhood of Daly City) and Joseph Eichler (who built farther south on the Peninsula, with his largest development in the San Mateo Highlands).

Daly City: 

Convenience is king in the northernmost city in San Mateo County, which offers super-easy access to San Francisco by car or public transit. Like its urban neighbor, Daly City boasts Pacific coastline and the same seemingly ever-present fog, too. The housing — a combination of apartments, condos and the colorful single-family post-war homes that inspired the song “Little Boxes” — is denser here than in other parts of the Peninsula, making Daly City the largest city in San Mateo County. Twelve elementary schools feed into four middle schools and two high schools (there’s also Summit Shasta, a charter high school). Since 1941, Daly City’s Cow Palace has hosted the annual Grand National Rodeo (including a virtual iteration in 2020).

Redwood City: 

Once dubbed the “Chrysanthemum Capital of the World” — thanks to brothers Eikichi and Sadakusi Enomoto cultivating the flowers here in the early 1900s — Redwood City has also been known for leather tanning and lumber. More recently, it has attracted big names in tech like Oracle and Box and their employees.

A downtown revitalization in 2006 restored historic Courthouse Square, which now hosts art festivals and movie screenings, as well as the Fox Theatre, a huge events space. New-ish spots such as La Viga Seafood & Cocina Mexicana, Gambrel & Co. craft butchery and Vesta (whose pizzas landed on Michelin’s Bib Gourmand guide) have joined decades-old restaurants like Gourmet Haus Staudt and Talk of Broadway. Thirteen schools make up the Redwood City School District, which includes Spanish and Mandarin immersion programs and McKinley Institute of Technology. In addition to two public high schools, charter schools Design Tech and Summit Prep are located in Redwood City. Cañada College, a community college in the western part of the city, has a noteworthy STEM program.

San Mateo: 

Situated about halfway between San Francisco and San Jose with three Caltrain stations shuttling workers in either direction, San Mateo can feel a world away from city life. Even its charming downtown is next to Central Park, a 16-acre oasis that includes the Japanese Garden and seasonal mini-train. The city is also home to Sawyer Camp Trail — adjacent to Crystal Springs Reservoir, with six miles of paved trail for stroller-pushers and cyclists — and Coyote Point Recreation Area, a 670-acre park along San Francisco Bay.

Hillsdale Shopping Center, a venue with more than 120 stores, is undergoing a massive update, and nearby, former racetrack Bay Meadows is now a mixed-use development with housing, retail and offices. The San Mateo-Foster City School District includes 16 elementary schools and three middle schools, along with North Shoreview Montessori and STEAM-focused Bayside Academy. There are three public high schools, and College of San Mateo, a community college, draws students from all over the county.

Menlo Park: 

Named after the Irish village of Menlough, a quick look at this mid-Peninsula city’s El Camino Real and the area around the Menlo Park Caltrain station reveals that big changes are coming. Projects currently under development will yield more residential units, as well as office space, retail shops and restaurants. A block away, the Guild Theatre is set to become a highly anticipated, Ken Fulk-designed entertainment venue, and in the meantime, downtown is full of beloved local institutions. Pick up a book at Kepler’s and a coffee at Café Barrone next door, then enjoy both alfresco by the fountain. Nearby Allied Arts also features retail spaces along with artists’ studios in a beautiful garden setting. Ten-acre Sharon Park is another outdoor draw.

Residents are served by the Los Lomitas and Menlo Park City school districts, which have a combined four elementary and two middle schools. There are three local high schools: Menlo-Atherton, TIDE Academy and Mid-Peninsula. Facebook is a major employer, and its Menlo Park headquarters, complete with giant thumbs-up sign, has even become a tourist

Burlingame: 

Incorporated in 1908 as San Franciscans decamped after the 1906 earthquake, Burlingame remains a desirable place to live thanks to its pair of Caltrain stops, proximity to San Francisco and SFO, and a range of single-family homes, condos and apartments that appeals to buyers and renters alike.

The public school system includes six elementary schools, Burlingame Intermediate School and two high schools. A pair of commercial districts are anchored by pedestrian-friendly thoroughfares Broadway and Burlingame Avenues, with a mix of independent and national outfits. Of the former, Preston’s Candy & Ice Cream, founded in 1946, is a must-visit. Located along the San Francisco Bay, the new Bayfront Park (opened in February 2021 near Oculus’ 800,000-square-foot headquarters) is ideal for scenic strolls and picnics, while Anza Lagoon caters to more athletic endeavors like running and biking. The regular Fresh Market features food and crafts purveyors as well as live music, while Kohl Mansion (a 107-year-old mansion and wedding venue on the National Register of Historic Places) offers chamber concerts and education programs.

Palo Alto:

Palo Alto residents choose the mid-Peninsula city for its cultural attractions (like Stanford University’s Cantor Arts Center and Bing Concert Hall), convenient access to campus and the public schools — including 12 elementary schools, three middle schools and two high schools (one of which features a well-known media training lab). The popular walking trails around Stanford’s “The Dish” have multiple entry points, and a lesser-known campus highlight is the cactus garden (not far from the mausoleum where the school’s founders and their son, for whom the university is named, are buried).

Stanford Shopping Center delivers a mix of retailers, from Everlane to Hermès, the California Avenue business district is filled with longstanding culinary favorites like La Bodeguita Del Medio, and old and new, cheap and chic coexist peacefully downtown. Grab coffee from Blue Bottle on University Avenue; lunch at Stanford’s Cantor Café overlooking the Rodin Sculpture Garden; and dinner at Michelin-starred Protégé, from a couple of French Laundry alums. A number of big-name companies were founded in Palo Alto and many are still headquartered here, including Tesla and VMware.

Woodside: 

Tucked into the interior of the Peninsula just off I-280, Woodside offers pastoral, often sprawling properties — think stables and even vineyards — along winding, wooded roads that Teslas share with cyclists and equestrians.

The Woodside School District is composed of an elementary and a middle school, while Woodside High School is in neighboring Redwood City (a number of private schools are located in the surrounding cities). A small commercial corridor near I-280 includes a handful of shops and restaurants, like local favorites Emily Joubert boutique and the Michelin-starred Village Pub (and its more casual sister, the Village Bakery).