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A mid-size, diverse city in the heart of the North Bay

About 177,000 residents, with a strong Latino presence, growing Asian communities, and historic Italian and Portuguese roots tied to viticulture.

Santa Rosa has roughly 177,000 inhabitants and is the fifth-largest city in the Bay Area. The population mixes non-Hispanic white residents (about half), a strong Hispanic/Latino community (close to a third, mostly of Mexican and Central American origin), Asian communities (Filipinos, Vietnamese, Chinese), and an African American minority smaller than the state average.

English is the dominant language, but Spanish is widely spoken in businesses, schools, and public services. City, county, and school documents are typically available in both English and Spanish. In neighborhoods such as Roseland and South Park, Spanish is nearly as common as English on the street.

Religiously, the city follows California's general pattern: a Christian majority (Catholics with a strong Latino tradition, various Protestant denominations), a large share with no religion, and smaller Jewish, Buddhist, and Hindu communities. Santa Rosa also has a visible LGBTQ+ scene, drawing from its proximity to Guerneville and the Russian River.

177,149
Population
39 yrs
Median age
$85,000
Median income
per year
Urban population95.0%
Foreign-born18.5%
Languages spoken
  • English
  • Spanish
  • Tagalog
  • Vietnamese
  • Chinese (Mandarin and Cantonese)
Main religions
  • Catholic
  • Evangelical Protestant
  • No religion
  • Judaism
  • Buddhism

Cheaper than San Francisco, but far from affordable

Cost of living above the US national average. Housing is the biggest burden; groceries and services are close to Bay Area levels.

Santa Rosa is expensive by American standards, though clearly more affordable than San Francisco, Oakland, or San Jose. The biggest budget item is housing: rents and home prices rose sharply after the 2017 fires, which destroyed thousands of homes, and never fully returned to pre-fire levels. A one-bedroom in a decent neighborhood typically requires a comfortable middle-class income.

Grocery costs vary widely: large chains (Safeway, Lucky, Raley's) compete with Trader Joe's, Whole Foods, and Mexican markets (Lola's, Mi Pueblo) that pull down produce and meat prices. Gasoline in Sonoma County tends to rank among the most expensive in the country, and insurance (home and auto) is pressured by wildfire risk.

Wages partially offset these costs. Healthcare, government, and tech sectors pay well; hospitality, agriculture, and retail pay California's minimum wage, one of the highest in the nation. Families relying on a single service-sector income often share housing or live in nearby Rohnert Park, Windsor, or Cloverdale.

125Cost index (US = 100)25% above US average
CategorySingleCoupleFamily (2 + 2)
iHousing$2,300$2,800$3,700
iFood$530$900$1,400
iTransport$350$560$800
iHealthcare$250$480$760
iChildcare$2,300
iOther$400$620$1,040
Monthly total$3,830$5,360$10,000

Quiet neighborhoods, tight supply, and post-fire rebuilding

The city has very distinct neighborhoods, from Victorian homes downtown to rebuilt subdivisions in Fountaingrove. Rental supply is limited and competition is high.

Santa Rosa's housing stock ranges from Victorian homes along McDonald Avenue, one of the most beautiful streets in the state, to new condominiums in Fountaingrove and Coffey Park, both largely rebuilt after the Tubbs Fire. Apartments are most common near downtown, along Mendocino Avenue, and around Santa Rosa Junior College, where SRJC students and Kaiser employees compete for units.

For families, areas such as Bennett Valley, Rincon Valley, and Oakmont (the latter an active 55+ community) are sought after for their schools and neighborhood feel. Roseland, annexed to the city in 2017, is traditionally Latino, with more accessible home prices and a strong community life. The West End and Junior College District offer historic charm at still-elevated prices.

The market is tight: rental vacancy typically stays below five percent, and homes for sale receive multiple offers. Newcomers usually start by renting in larger complexes on Bicentennial Way or in neighboring Rohnert Park before finding a longer-term home. Home insurance in high wildfire-risk zones (Fountaingrove, Mark West) is a significant budget line.

Purchase price (m²)
  • Center$8,800/m²
  • Outside$7,200/m²
9.5×
Price-to-income
6.8%
Mortgage rate (20y)
Recommended neighborhoods
  • Bennett Valley
  • Rincon Valley
  • McDonald Avenue / Junior College District
  • West End
  • Fountaingrove
  • +2 more

Healthcare, wine, and government drive the local economy

The largest employers are hospitals, wineries, hospitality, and the Sonoma County public sector. California's high minimum wage sets the floor.

Santa Rosa's economy rests on three pillars: healthcare, government, and the wine-tourism-hospitality complex. Kaiser Permanente, Sutter Health, and Providence (St. Joseph) operate major hospitals and clinics, together employing thousands from nurses and technicians to administrative staff. Sonoma County and the city government provide stable public-sector employment.

Wine and hospitality are ubiquitous. Hundreds of wineries in the county hire in production, distribution, sales, events, and tasting rooms, and Santa Rosa concentrates logistics and offices. Restaurants, hotels, and Graton Resort and Casino (in Rohnert Park) also generate service-industry jobs. Construction has remained active since the post-fire rebuilding.

Tech exists but is small compared to the South Bay: Keysight Technologies (electronic instrumentation) is a historic employer, and there are startups in agtech and fintech. Most tech workers operate in a hybrid model with companies based in San Francisco or the South Bay. For recent immigrants, hospitality, agriculture, construction, and personal care (caregiving) are the most common entry-level paths.

$4,700
Avg net salary
per month
$2,800
Minimum wage
per month
4.0%
Unemployment
62.5%
Labor force
Dominant sectors
  • Healthcare and hospitals
  • Wine and viticulture
  • Hospitality and tourism
  • Government (county and city)
  • Construction
  • +2 more
Major employers
  • Kaiser Permanente
  • Sutter Santa Rosa Regional Hospital
  • Providence St. Joseph Health
  • County of Sonoma
  • Keysight Technologies
  • +3 more

A strong community college network and mixed public schools

Santa Rosa Junior College is the regional anchor. Four-year universities are in neighboring cities, but the region offers many nearby options.

Santa Rosa Junior College (SRJC) is the heart of local higher education. Founded in 1918, it serves more than 20,000 students in two-year programs, university transfer tracks, and vocational training, with affordable tuition and a tree-lined campus at the city's center. For many immigrant families, SRJC is an accessible entry point into American higher education and offers robust ESL programs.

Sonoma State University, in Rohnert Park 15 minutes south, is the nearest public four-year university, part of the CSU system. Research universities (UC Berkeley, UC Davis, Stanford) are one to two hours away. There are also regional private colleges and Empire College, focused on law and business.

The K-12 system is divided mainly among Santa Rosa City Schools and smaller districts such as Bennett Valley, Rincon Valley, and Wright. Quality varies considerably between schools: those in the eastern and northern parts of the city tend to have better ratings, while schools to the west serve more Latino and lower-income populations, with solid bilingual programs. Charter and private schools (Cardinal Newman, Ursuline) round out the options.

Literacy99.0%
Tertiary education50.0%
495
PISA score (avg)
$17,000
Private school
per year
Notable universities
  • Santa Rosa Junior College
  • Sonoma State University (Rohnert Park)
  • Empire College
  • Pacific Union College (in St. Helena, nearby)

North Bay's main healthcare hub

Santa Rosa concentrates hospitals and clinics serving all of Sonoma County. Access is good for those with insurance; without coverage, costs are high.

Santa Rosa is the primary medical center for the North Bay. Three major systems operate in the city: Kaiser Permanente (an integrated model with its own health plan), Sutter Health (Sutter Santa Rosa Regional Hospital), and Providence (St. Joseph and Memorial Hospital). Together they cover trauma, maternity, cardiology, oncology, and most specialties.

With employer-sponsored health insurance, care is generally prompt and of good quality. For those without coverage, the path runs through community clinics such as Santa Rosa Community Health, which operates on a sliding-scale fee, and Medi-Cal (California's Medicaid program), open to legal residents and certain immigrants. Subsidized dental and mental health clinics are also available.

Cost is the main challenge: even with a public safety net, an emergency room visit can cost thousands of dollars without insurance. Twenty-four-hour pharmacies (CVS, Walgreens) are accessible. For recent immigrants, starting with Santa Rosa Community Health and state children's health programs (CHDP, Healthy Kids Sonoma County) is common. Vaccination and prenatal care are widely available.

Healthcare index62.0 / 100
  • Life expectancyyears at birth
    78.0yrs
  • Doctors per 1kpracticing physicians
    2.7
  • Health spendper capita, per year
    $12,000
  • Public systemoverall quality rating
    Good

Mid-size city, generally safe, with pockets to avoid at night

Crime rates near the state average. Residential neighborhoods are quiet; some commercial corridors and motel strips on Mendocino warrant more awareness at night.

Santa Rosa is generally safe by California standards. Most recorded crimes are property offenses (vehicle theft, car break-ins, shoplifting), and violent crime is concentrated in specific areas and situations rather than random attacks on residents. Neighborhoods such as Bennett Valley, Rincon Valley, Oakmont, and Fountaingrove are considered very safe.

Areas calling for more caution include the Mendocino Avenue corridor north of downtown at night, the area around older motels on Cleveland Avenue, parts of western Roseland on poorly lit streets, and some stretches of Sebastopol Road. This is not a red-zone pattern; it is a matter of common sense: stay alert at night, do not leave valuables visible in a car, and avoid parks after dark.

Wildfires are the most significant real safety concern. Hillside neighborhoods (Fountaingrove, Mark West, Skyhawk) sit in high wildfire-risk zones, and the fire season from August through October can bring dense smoke and occasional evacuation orders. The city has a robust alert system (SoCo Alerts, Nixle), and registration is strongly recommended for all residents.

6.0
Homicides per 100k
per year
Safety index
58.0
Crime index
42.0
Safer neighborhoods
  • Bennett Valley
  • Rincon Valley
  • Oakmont
  • Fountaingrove (with wildfire awareness)
  • Skyhawk
  • McDonald Avenue
Areas to avoid
  • Mendocino Avenue corridor after dark
  • Cleveland Avenue motel strip
  • Industrial areas in the north of the city at night
  • Isolated stretches of Sebastopol Road

Car-dependent city, with SMART train connecting to the Bay Area

Daily life is car-dominated, but the SMART train and regional buses allow car-free living with planning. Cycling infrastructure has grown in recent years.

Santa Rosa is, in practice, a car city. Highway 101 runs north-south through the city and is the backbone of most travel. Highway 12 connects to Sebastopol to the west and Sonoma Valley to the east. Parking is generally easy and inexpensive outside downtown; Courthouse Square and Railroad Square have street parking and paid garages.

The SMART train (Sonoma-Marin Area Rail Transit) has two stations in Santa Rosa (Downtown and North) and connects the city to Larkspur, where riders transfer to a ferry to San Francisco. It is the best car-free option for those working in San Rafael, Petaluma, or the county seat. Sonoma County Transit and Santa Rosa CityBus cover neighborhoods and neighboring cities, though with limited frequency.

Charles M. Schulz-Sonoma County Airport (STS) operates direct flights to Los Angeles, Seattle, Denver, Phoenix, Las Vegas, and Portland, among others. For international flights, San Francisco International (SFO) is the reference, about 90 minutes away. Bike infrastructure has improved considerably: the Joe Rodota Trail and Santa Rosa Creek Trail link downtown to Sebastopol and residential neighborhoods.

1
Metro lines
2
Metro stations
27 min
Avg commute
48
Walkability
Airports
  • STS - Charles M. Schulz-Sonoma County Airport
  • SFO - San Francisco International (90 min)
  • OAK - Oakland International (75 min)
  • Bike infrastructure

What the climate is like living in Santa Rosa

Santa Rosa has an inland North Bay Mediterranean climate. Hot, dry summers with cool nights; mild, rainy winters ideal for viticulture.

Summer is hot and dry, with daytime highs between 28 and 32 degrees. Humidity is low, and nights drop to around 11 or 12 degrees, cooling homes naturally. Air conditioning is common, though many residents rely on fans and open windows at night.

Winter is mild and relatively wet, with lows near 3 degrees and highs around 14. Rain falls mainly from November through March, totaling about 800 millimeters per year. Light frosts occur on cold mornings, but snow is not a factor.

For daily life, a light jacket works for evenings and a waterproof layer is useful in winter. Homes typically have central heating. The region is vulnerable to wildfires from August through October, with episodes of heavy smoke in some years.

Sunny days / year260 days
Avg high (°F)
  • 60°J
  • 62°F
  • 63°M
  • 71°A
  • 76°M
  • 83°J
  • 86°J
  • 88°A
  • 85°S
  • 79°O
  • 67°N
  • 58°D
Avg low (°F)
  • 43°J
  • 41°F
  • 43°M
  • 46°A
  • 51°M
  • 55°J
  • 56°J
  • 58°A
  • 57°S
  • 52°O
  • 45°N
  • 43°D
Rainfall (")
  • 6"J
  • 4"F
  • 4"M
  • 1"A
  • 1"M
  • 0"J
  • 0"J
  • 0"A
  • 0"S
  • 2"O
  • 2"N
  • 7"D

Wine, Peanuts, and a California rural identity

Local culture blends farm-to-table dining, the Charles Schulz legacy, agricultural festivals, and a strong Latino presence in the western neighborhoods.

Santa Rosa is the city where Charles Schulz, creator of Peanuts, lived and worked. The Charles M. Schulz Museum is a must-visit and Snoopy is woven into the local identity, appearing everywhere from the airport to the adjacent ice-skating rink. Alongside that, the city takes pride in its agricultural heritage: the legacy of horticulturist Luther Burbank, who lived here, is still celebrated at Luther Burbank Home and Gardens.

The food scene is strong and closely tied to Wine Country: farm-to-table restaurants, craft breweries (Russian River Brewing, Third Street Aleworks), bakeries, and producers' markets. Dungeness crab in winter, grilled chops with zinfandel sauce, and sourdough bread are part of everyday life. Latino influence shows in pupuserias, taquerias, and small markets in Roseland.

The event calendar is full: Sonoma County Fair in July and August, the Wednesday Night Market in summer, the Luther Burbank Rose Parade and Festival in spring, and film festivals at the Roxy Stadium. Cultural life is completed by the Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, which hosts national touring shows, and galleries in the SOFA District (South of A Street).

6
Major museums
Notable dishes
  • Dungeness crab
  • Sonoma sourdough bread
  • Pupusas (Salvadoran influence)
  • Roseland-style carnitas tacos
  • Sonoma lamb
  • +1 more
Annual events
  • Sonoma County Fair
  • Luther Burbank Rose Parade and Festival
  • Wednesday Night Market
  • Sonoma County Harvest Fair
  • Russian River Beer Revival
  • +1 more

Wineries, redwoods, Peanuts, and a historic downtown

Attractions range from tasting rooms and state parks to museums dedicated to Charles Schulz and Luther Burbank. An ideal base for exploring Wine Country.

The Charles M. Schulz Museum, north of downtown, is the city's most visited attraction, celebrating the life of the Peanuts creator with exhibits, a cinema, and an adjacent ice-skating rink. A few blocks away, Luther Burbank Home and Gardens preserves the house and grounds of the horticulturist who transformed American botany, with free admission.

Railroad Square is the historic district, with exposed-brick buildings, antique shops, restaurants, and the SMART train station. Old Courthouse Square, recently redesigned as a central plaza, hosts farmers markets, summer concerts, and community events. For nature, Annadel State Park, Howarth Park, and Spring Lake Regional Park offer trails, lake access, and cycling minutes from downtown.

The surrounding region is worth exploring on its own terms: Armstrong Redwoods State Natural Reserve in Guerneville, the beaches of Bodega Bay (the setting of Hitchcock's The Birds), the wineries of the Russian River, Dry Creek, and Alexander valleys, and the Sonoma Coast. Santa Rosa is a practical base for all of this without paying Healdsburg or St. Helena prices.

  1. 1Charles M. Schulz Museum
  2. 2Luther Burbank Home and Gardens
  3. 3Railroad Square Historic District
  4. 4Old Courthouse Square
  5. 5Safari West (wildlife park)
  6. 6Spring Lake Regional Park
Nightlife5.0 / 10
Parks & green spaces
  • Howarth Park
  • Spring Lake Regional Park
  • Annadel State Park (Trione-Annadel)
  • Juilliard Park
  • Galvin Community Park
  • +1 more

Strong Latino presence and immigrant communities across the city's west side

About one fifth of the population was born outside the United States, with a majority of Mexican and Central American origin, plus smaller but established Asian and European communities.

Santa Rosa has a substantial immigrant population, concentrated mainly in Roseland, on the city's west side, and in neighborhoods along Sebastopol Road. The large majority came from Mexico (particularly the states of Jalisco, Michoacan, and Oaxaca), followed by Salvadorans, Guatemalans, and Nicaraguans who arrived in recent decades, many tied to work in wineries and construction.

There are smaller but visible communities of Filipinos (with strong ties to Kaiser Hospital), Vietnamese, Chinese, Indians, and Iranians. Italians and Portuguese are part of the city's older history, arriving for the wine industry in the early twentieth century. British, Canadian, German, and French residents appear in smaller numbers, frequently connected to wine, hospitality, and professional services.

Immigrant services are reasonably available. Organizations such as North Bay Organizing Project, La Luz Center, and Catholic Charities handle immigration, housing, and labor rights questions. Religious networks (Catholic parishes with Spanish-language Masses, mosques, Buddhist and Hindu temples) function as arrival points and support systems for newly arrived families.

32,800
Foreign-born residents
estimated
Top countries of origin
  • Mexico
  • El Salvador
  • Guatemala
  • Philippines
  • Vietnam
  • China
  • India
  • Italy
Foreign consulates
  • Consulate General of Mexico in San Francisco (jurisdiction)
  • Consulate General of El Salvador in San Francisco (jurisdiction)
  • Consulate General of Guatemala in San Francisco (jurisdiction)
  • Consulate General of the Philippines in San Francisco (jurisdiction)
  • Consulate General of Italy in San Francisco (jurisdiction)
Community organizations
  • North Bay Organizing Project
  • La Luz Center
  • Catholic Charities of Santa Rosa
  • Sonoma County Latino Service Providers
  • Corazon Healdsburg (regional)
  • Santa Rosa Community Health

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