Cupertino
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Great for
- Schools
- Internet Access
- Medical Facilities
- Neighborly Spirit
- Parks & Recreation
Not great for
- Cost of Living
- Nightlife
- Lack of Traffic
- Parking
- Public Transport
Who lives here?
- Families with kids
- Professionals
- Retirees
- Students
- Singles
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Reviews
Cupertino
rating details
2yrs+
- Neighborly Spirit
- Safe & Sound
- Peace & Quiet
- Eating Out
- Shopping Options
- Medical Facilities
- Schools
"One of the smartest communities around"
Located at the southern end of the San Francisco peninsula, Cupertino is a sophisticated, upper middle-class California suburb. In fact, Forbes magazine ranked the city as one of the most educated small towns in California. Geographically speaking, it is part of the greater Santa Clara County, and made up of numerous neighborhoods (most of which have been developed before the 1960’s). The city itself spans about 11 square miles of densely packed, suburban terrain and extends to the foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains. According to the 2010 US Census, the population is an astounding 58,000, most of whom take pride in its proximity to California’s biggest job hub San Jose. They dub it the “heart of Silicon Valley.”
Cupertino’s commercial quarters vary in upper middle-class aesthetics. In most cases, you’ll see beautiful house fronts and yards that always seem to be clean cut and manicured. Driving through the community you’ll notice its quiet, residential streets and safe living quarters. Nicer, larger homes dominate the western side of State Route 85. Cupertino’s recent suburban development is Oak Valley. It is the city’s northern most neighborhood and was developed around the year 2000. For numbers sake, median household incomes average about $120,000/year, while median house prices circle around $900,000 (and can escalate as high as $3 million). If you’re looking to rent, you’ll likely pay upwards of $2,000/month. Those that live within the area are predominately asian (56%), with a rather large white minority (35%).
Although Cupertino does not have a traditional downtown hub or common shopping area, many computer software and tech companies call home here. In fact, Cupertino is mostly known for its headquartering of Apple Inc. It also is the city’s largest employer (34,000), while Oracle is the city’s second most employing company, creating jobs for over 8,000 residents. There are plenty of other large office parks that dedicate themselves to other professions, most of which are consultant management firms and design functions. For commuters, two freeways serve the city: State Route 85 and Interstate 280. At the freeways’ junction, you’ll come across Vallco Mall, which includes a couple department stores (Macy’s, JCPenney and Sears), a bowling alley and movie theatre complex. Every Friday afternoon, it hosts a farmer’s market.
For young families, the city offers a high-class education. It’s main high school, Monta Vista High School, has garnered a 10 out of 10 on greatschools.org with exceedingly high test scores and a great student-teacher ratio. Elsewhere, you can find De Anza College, one of only two community colleges in the Foothill-De Anza Community College District.
Cupertino’s commercial quarters vary in upper middle-class aesthetics. In most cases, you’ll see beautiful house fronts and yards that always seem to be clean cut and manicured. Driving through the community you’ll notice its quiet, residential streets and safe living quarters. Nicer, larger homes dominate the western side of State Route 85. Cupertino’s recent suburban development is Oak Valley. It is the city’s northern most neighborhood and was developed around the year 2000. For numbers sake, median household incomes average about $120,000/year, while median house prices circle around $900,000 (and can escalate as high as $3 million). If you’re looking to rent, you’ll likely pay upwards of $2,000/month. Those that live within the area are predominately asian (56%), with a rather large white minority (35%).
Although Cupertino does not have a traditional downtown hub or common shopping area, many computer software and tech companies call home here. In fact, Cupertino is mostly known for its headquartering of Apple Inc. It also is the city’s largest employer (34,000), while Oracle is the city’s second most employing company, creating jobs for over 8,000 residents. There are plenty of other large office parks that dedicate themselves to other professions, most of which are consultant management firms and design functions. For commuters, two freeways serve the city: State Route 85 and Interstate 280. At the freeways’ junction, you’ll come across Vallco Mall, which includes a couple department stores (Macy’s, JCPenney and Sears), a bowling alley and movie theatre complex. Every Friday afternoon, it hosts a farmer’s market.
For young families, the city offers a high-class education. It’s main high school, Monta Vista High School, has garnered a 10 out of 10 on greatschools.org with exceedingly high test scores and a great student-teacher ratio. Elsewhere, you can find De Anza College, one of only two community colleges in the Foothill-De Anza Community College District.
Pros
- Great Companies
- Great Schools
- Safe
Cons
- Bland and Boring
- No Nightlife
- Overpriced Homes
Recommended for
- Professionals
- Families with kids
- Retirees
- Students
Cupertino
rating details
2yrs+
- Neighborly Spirit
- Safe & Sound
- Clean & Green
- Pest Free
- Peace & Quiet
- Eating Out
- Nightlife
- Parks & Recreation
- Shopping Options
- Gym & Fitness
- Internet Access
- Lack of Traffic
- Parking
- Cost of Living
- Resale or Rental Value
- Public Transport
- Medical Facilities
- Schools
- Childcare
"Apple, Oracle and Belly Dancers"
In Cupertino you are pretty much deep in the engine of the high tech industry that has infused so much wealth into this region of California. Cupertino is home to Apple, HP and Oracle, so it is definitely not at the periphery of Silicon Valley.
Given this, it should come as no surprise the median home price in the area is around $825K and that you get lots of Silicon Valley hotshots in the area. Of course, if you pulled the ranch homes up and moved them to the East Bay, the exact same houses would drop to about half the price and instead of the newest models of BMW’s outside, you would have economy cars instead. But since people hate wasting their time in the parking lot which is the Silicon Valley commute, they are willing to pay the stratospheric prices being charged for the homes in Cupertino rather than spending more time in their cars than in their homes.
And of course, the prices go up substantially as you get up into the country roads on the western edge of the valley where the vantage points are now taken up with the homes of Silicon Valley engineers and power brokers of various kinds.
The schools don’t disappoint either, being some of the best in the Valley. (This is pretty much true of all the schools along the western end of the county.)
Cupertino is not really known for its restaurants, having a number of the typical suburban fast food places, but there are a few place worthy of note, such as Alexander’s Steakhouse and Gochi Japanese Fusion Tapas. The place that I really like though is Arya Global, a Persian place. It was a real eye-opener for me, having never had Iranian food before. Definitely worth a try, if you have never tried it. Start with the Mediterranean platter and then move on from there. The belly-dancers can be fun too.
Cupertino is not a really great place as far and nightlife goes, unless bowling is your thing. It still does pretty much feel like the ‘burbs at night.
Overall, a great place to live if you work at Apple or in nearby Silicon Valley company and want to avoid the commute, but pretty overpriced and pretty boring for the rest of the universe.
Given this, it should come as no surprise the median home price in the area is around $825K and that you get lots of Silicon Valley hotshots in the area. Of course, if you pulled the ranch homes up and moved them to the East Bay, the exact same houses would drop to about half the price and instead of the newest models of BMW’s outside, you would have economy cars instead. But since people hate wasting their time in the parking lot which is the Silicon Valley commute, they are willing to pay the stratospheric prices being charged for the homes in Cupertino rather than spending more time in their cars than in their homes.
And of course, the prices go up substantially as you get up into the country roads on the western edge of the valley where the vantage points are now taken up with the homes of Silicon Valley engineers and power brokers of various kinds.
The schools don’t disappoint either, being some of the best in the Valley. (This is pretty much true of all the schools along the western end of the county.)
Cupertino is not really known for its restaurants, having a number of the typical suburban fast food places, but there are a few place worthy of note, such as Alexander’s Steakhouse and Gochi Japanese Fusion Tapas. The place that I really like though is Arya Global, a Persian place. It was a real eye-opener for me, having never had Iranian food before. Definitely worth a try, if you have never tried it. Start with the Mediterranean platter and then move on from there. The belly-dancers can be fun too.
Cupertino is not a really great place as far and nightlife goes, unless bowling is your thing. It still does pretty much feel like the ‘burbs at night.
Overall, a great place to live if you work at Apple or in nearby Silicon Valley company and want to avoid the commute, but pretty overpriced and pretty boring for the rest of the universe.
Pros
- Great Companies
- Safe
- Great Schools
Cons
- Overpriced Homes
- No Nightlife
- Bland and Boring
Recommended for
- Professionals
- Families with kids