San Francisco
The top of the funnel and the top of the volume knob. San Francisco is where the youngest, loudest, most optimistic version of the Bay lives β where a stranger in line will tell you about the company that is going to change everything, and one time in fifty they will be right. Come here first for the energy. It is the most alive place many people ever stand.
ClimateCool, foggy summers (bring a hoodie in July), mild wet winters. The famous "coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco" city.
Getting inMuni buses & metro, BART, the Caltrain terminus, ferries β all one Clipper tap. You do not need a car here; a car here is a liability.
CostThe highest. This is why the Getting There page is half about not signing a lease.
Go here forFounders, consumer apps, AI, crypto, nightlife, and the events scene. Come here for the hype and the optimism.
The Peninsula
Home of Stanford University β in Stanford, California, right next to Palo Alto R-090 β and of Sand Hill Road in Menlo Park, the single most famous stretch of venture capital on earth. R-091 Stanford may be the most business-friendly university on the planet: it actively turns students into founders instead of just grading them. Companies started by Stanford alumni and faculty β Google, HP, Cisco, Yahoo, Netflix, and Instagram among them β number around 39,900 and generate roughly $2.7 trillion a year; gathered into one country they would rank among the ten largest economies on earth. R-105 The professors here tend to help you build the company, not take it from you. You can walk the campus for free on a weekend and feel the specific gravity of the place β the university, the money, and the ambition all sitting within a few miles of the train.
ClimateThe mild middle. Warmer and sunnier than the city, cooler than the deep South Bay. Arguably the Bay's most comfortable weather.
Getting inCaltrain is the spine β it runs straight down the Peninsula through Palo Alto and Menlo Park. This is the corridor the train was built for.
CostHigh, but you are paying for proximity to the university and the money.
Go here forThe university, the venture capital, biotech, and being ten minutes from everything. The grown-up middle of the gradient.
South Bay Β· Silicon Valley
This is the actual Silicon Valley β the flat, warm, endlessly office-parked valley floor where the trillion-dollar companies quietly live. It is less glamorous than San Francisco and far more consequential. If San Francisco is where you go to be excited, the South Bay is where you go to be paid to do the deep, patient, world-bending work. The nearer you get to the bottom of the map, the more serious the money and the mission get.
ClimateThe warmest and sunniest of the spine β protected from the ocean fog by the Santa Cruz Mountains. Real summers here; it gets hotter the further south you go toward Morgan Hill and Gilroy.
Getting inMore of a car culture, plus VTA light rail and buses, with Caltrain running down the west side to San Jose and beyond.
CostHigh, but the cheap-camper south end (Morgan Hill, Gilroy) is right here β see Getting There.
Go here forDeep tech, semiconductors, hardware, and the biggest companies in the world. This is the serious end. Come here to build the machine, not to talk about it.
Who's thereApple R-053, Nvidia R-058, Google R-065, Intel R-051, Cisco R-057, Adobe R-056, eBay R-062, Netflix R-064, PayPal R-067, Yahoo R-060, Zoom R-079, Oracle R-055 Β· see The Wall
East Bay
Home of UC Berkeley, and of the Free Speech Movement β in 1964 students there won the fight for political speech on campus, and Mario Savio gave his "bodies upon the gears" speech on the steps of Sproul Hall, which the university renamed the "Mario Savio Steps" in 1997. R-092 Go sit on those steps on a weekday. Sproul Plaza is wall-to-wall with tables and clubs and impossibly smart, argumentative students, and it is one of the easiest places on earth to fall into a conversation that changes your life. The East Bay is grittier, cheaper, more creative, and one BART ride from everything.
ClimateWarm and sunny β Oakland and Berkeley dodge most of the city's fog. Often the nicest weather-to-price ratio in the whole Bay.
Getting inBART runs under the bay straight into San Francisco in about 20 minutes. The East Bay is the great cheat code for "cheaper, but still connected."
CostNoticeably cheaper than San Francisco or the Peninsula for what you get.
Go here forGrit, art, the university, cheaper rent, and meeting people who are brilliant but broke β which, right now, is you.
North Bay
Across the Golden Gate: Marin, Napa, Sonoma. This is the calm end of the Bay β mountains, redwoods, vineyards, and the kind of quiet that can save your nerves in the first hard months. It is further from the action, but the ferry ride into the city past Alcatraz is the least-bad commute in America, and the North Bay is a soft landing for a nervous system that grew up somewhere quiet.
ClimateWarm and dry inland (Napa, Sonoma), cooler near the water. Wine-country sunshine.
Getting inThe ferry into San Francisco is genuinely lovely, plus SMART rail and buses. Longer haul to Silicon Valley, though.
CostQuieter and often cheaper the further out you go; the RV play works well up here too (see Getting There).
Go here forNature, quiet, wine country, and a slower base if the city is too much at first. Redwoods and the coast on your doorstep.