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~$800K
Median SP Home
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$700K+
Saved vs. Pico
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~35 min
To Pico, Off-Peak
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Wait, San Pedro?
That's the most common first reaction — simply because a lot of Angelenos haven't been down this way in a while. What you'll actually find is a coastal town full of character, modernizing fast, with a lot going for it.
San Pedro is a collection of genuinely beautiful neighborhoods — ocean views, hillside streets, tree-lined blocks, a walkable historic downtown, and the Palos Verdes peninsula right next door as a backdrop. The cost of living lets young Jewish families actually buy a home without leaving California. It's quiet, it's laid-back, and on a good day Pico-Robertson is only about 35 minutes away (Hancock Park a bit more, the Valley longer still).
Our shul sits in the Vista del Oro neighborhood — a centrally located, welcoming area that makes a natural hub for the growing community. We're happy to walk you through the different neighborhoods and help you find the right fit — the Rabbi can also connect you with a local real estate agent who knows the area well.
Did you know? San Pedro is officially part of the City of LA.
Even though San Pedro feels very much like a town of its own, it's legally a neighborhood of Los Angeles — just like Venice, Hollywood, or Westwood. We vote for the LA mayor, send an LA City Councilmember, get LAPD, LAUSD, and the full set of LA city services. San Pedro (and neighboring Wilmington) was annexed to Los Angeles on August 28, 1909, specifically so LA could have a world-class harbor — which it did, and which became today's Port of Los Angeles.
“San Pedro is changing fast.”
A lot of new investment, new housing, and a reimagined waterfront — plus a fresh energy you can feel walking the streets. Just a sample of what's underway:
- West Harbor — the reimagined waterfront replacing the old Ports O'Call — opens in 2026 with a mile-long promenade, a 175-ft Ferris wheel (the tallest in California), a carousel, harbor-side walks, a family park, and ship-watching
- New mixed-use buildings going up in the old downtown — projects like Jules San Pedro (281 apartments + ground-floor retail on Beacon & 6th) are reshaping the streets
- The Rancho San Pedro redevelopment — a 20-year, ~$1 billion plan — will replace WWII-era housing with over 1,500 new homes and 5+ acres of public open space
- Averill Park, Point Fermin, Angels Gate & the Korean Friendship Bell, Friendship Park, the working-port channels — all already here
Most people who come visit come away surprised — there's genuinely more here than they expected. And for the last few years, a small but growing Jewish community has been putting down roots in San Pedro. That's why this page exists.
Talk to Rabbi Yisroel Shuchat
Moving is a big decision. We'd rather answer your questions straight than sell you on anything. Reach out anytime.

