Benicia, CA


5 Reviews



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Benicia, CA

About Benicia, CA

Benicia, CA is situated along San Francisco Bay, just north of Vallejo and east of Martinez. The city has grown significantly over the past decade due to its diverse offerings like waterfront parks and trails, top-notch restaurants, unique antique shops, and art galleries alongside newer developments such as modern housing complexes and high-end retail outlets. Suburban complex - Northern California, 30 to 50 miles northeast of San Francisco.

State: California
County: Solano County
Metro Area: Vallejo Metro Area
City: Benicia
Zip Codes: 94510
Cost of Living:
Time zone: Pacific Standard Time (PST)
Elevation: 15 ft above sea level

This area, known also as Solano County, is really a series of residential communities strung along I-80 as it heads east from the San Francisco Bay Area. The string starts with Vallejo (once a gritty port and navy town), which has transformed as a result of Bay Area crowding and high home prices into a fairly desirable commuter community. East across a narrow range of mountains, the land flattens again into the towns of Cordelia, Suisun City and the larger Fairfield and Vacaville.

Fairfield was once primarily a military town supporting Travis Air Force Base, which is still an important part of the local economy. A number of commercial and industrial enterprises have spread into Fairfield and especially the Vacaville area to escape (but still serve) the Bay Area. These firms, from chemical to biotech to small manufacturers, have sprung up in the open valleys mainly in Vacaville and east and have created a lot of employment. Taken together with those commuting into the Bay, incomes and employment for residents of the area are strong.

Proximity to the Bay and geographic barriers (mountains and marshes) have restricted building somewhat, driving home prices upward. Most homes are modern California style – large houses with very small lots in tracts surrounded by high sound walls, with a crowded feel even though there’s an empty field or marsh adjacent to the tract. Schools, health care, shopping and other facilities are new and modern. Entertainment and arts venues in the immediate area are modest, but the area has good access to San Francisco and to the college town of Davis to the east.

Vallejo, Fairfield and Vacaville are built on narrow strips of flat, dry land between dry coastal mountains and the marshlands surrounding San Pablo and Suisun Bays, eastern extensions of the San Francisco Bay. Further east, the land spreads into prime agricultural land used mainly for orchards and vegetable growing. The climate is Mediterranean marine with a very strong influence from the San Francisco Bay just west. Summer days are pleasantly warm; evenings are cool and incursions of low, stratus clouds are common. The area can be windy, particularly in Fairfield, when large temperature differences arise between the Bay and the inland Central Valley. Most precipitation falls in winter as light to moderate rain, and temperatures seldom drop below freezing.

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Benicia Cost of Living

Year-round climate, strong economy, and close to san francisco make Benicia a great place to live.

$761,400
+55.6% higher than avg
$118,433
41.7% lower than avg
9.3 / 7.3
Comfort Index
summer/winter
Benicia Crime
26.9 / 100
Crime is ranked on a scale of 1 (low) to 100 (high). US average: 35.4
Minimum annual income
To live comfortably in Benicia, California
$145,800
for a family
$76,000
for a single person
Pros & Cons of Benicia
   Year-round climate
Cost of living and housing
   Strong economy
Growth and sprawl
   Close to San Francisco
Long commutes
Reviews for Benicia
    See all (5)

Over 15 years ago
Formerly an out of the way set of signs on the freeways noticed on the way out of town, with a reputation for refineries, Benicia has transformed over the years into a  More
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i've lived lots of places and benicia is by far the worst. th kist here (12-20) are jerks, they jump infront of cars, run around the stores like crazy people and are  More
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I'm a Californian who doesn't like cars, traffic or driving. That's why I moved to Benicia, so I could walk to work if I wanted. After work, I really don't need a car  More
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