Jewish Life · South Bay Coast

The Jewish Community
LA Hasn't Found Yet

San Pedro is LA's affordable coastal town — and home to a growing Jewish community welcoming every Jew, from every background, a short drive from Pico-Robertson and Hancock Park (the Valley is a longer haul, but still doable).

Talk to the Rabbi → Learn More First

Chabad S. Pedro Jewish Center · 817 W 9th St

Wide San Pedro photo
~$800K
Median SP Home
$700K+
Saved vs. Pico
~35 min
To Pico, Off-Peak
01 · The Reputation

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.

☀ Fun Fact

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.

02 · The Distance

Close Enough to LA Family

 

San Pedro is its own town, not a suburb — but it's within easy driving distance of LA's Jewish neighborhoods. Perfect for Shabbat visits, holiday meals at your parents, or picking up from kosher stores.

From San Pedro to… Drive Time (off-peak)
Pico-Robertson ~35-45 min
Hancock Park / La Brea ~45-55 min
Beverly Hills ~45-55 min
Sherman Oaks / Encino (Valley) ~60-80 min
Long Beach Chabad (daily minyan community) ~20-25 min
Kaiser Permanente Harbor City (hospital & medical offices) ~13-15 min
LAX Airport ~25 min
Long Beach Airport (LGB) ~25-30 min

Traffic adds 15-30 min during rush hour. Plan accordingly, like every Angeleno does.

03 · The Numbers

What You Get for Your Money

 

San Pedro isn't dirt cheap — nowhere in California is. But compared to the LA neighborhoods most Jewish families consider, it's several hundred thousand dollars more affordable.

Neighborhood Median Home Price (2026)
★ San Pedro ~$800,000
Tarzana ~$1.1M — $1.3M
Pico-Robertson ~$1.3M — $1.8M
Sherman Oaks ~$1.3M — $1.7M
Encino ~$1.4M — $2.1M
Beverlywood ~$2.3M — $3.3M
Hancock Park ~$2.3M — $4.2M

Sources: Redfin, Zillow, Homes.com (2026 medians). Prices vary by source and property type.

If You're Renting

Rental Prices in San Pedro

Not ready to buy? Renting in San Pedro runs well below West LA and the Valley. Ballpark medians:

Size Median Rent (2026)
1 bedroom ~$1,900 / mo
2 bedroom ~$2,700 / mo
3 bedroom ~$3,800 / mo
4+ bedroom (single-family) ~$7,300 / mo

Sources: Apartments.com, Zumper, Apartment Finder (2026). Ranges vary by neighborhood, condition, and amenities.

3-Bedroom Rent — By Neighborhood

Renting a 3BR in San Pedro runs noticeably less than the LA Jewish neighborhoods most families consider:

Neighborhood Median 3BR Rent (2026)
★ San Pedro ~$3,800 / mo
Hancock Park (apartments) ~$4,000 / mo
Pico-Robertson ~$4,600 / mo
Tarzana ~$4,600 / mo
Encino ~$5,000 / mo
Sherman Oaks ~$5,200 / mo
Beverlywood ~$5,300 / mo

Sources: Apartments.com, RentCafe, Zumper, RentHop (2026). Condition, size, and building age move these numbers meaningfully.

 
The Practical Difference
$700,000+

saved vs. Pico-Robertson — and much more vs. Beverlywood or Hancock Park. That's a down payment for a second property, the cushion that makes a single-income family viable, or tuition for Jewish day school for years.

04 · The Lifestyle

Life Outside the House

 

San Pedro and the Palos Verdes peninsula are one of the most underrated outdoor corners of Los Angeles. Most of this is free, public, and minutes from home.

Trails

Hikes & Views

  • Trail networks through San Pedro and Palos Verdes — cliffs, canyons, and ocean overlooks
  • White Point Nature Preserve, Sunken City, PV coastal trails, Portuguese Bend
  • Point Fermin Park at the southern tip of LA — historic lighthouse included
  • Korean Friendship Bell & Angels Gate Park — panoramic harbor views, right in town
Coast

Beaches & Harbor

  • Cabrillo Beach — the sandy, calm, family-friendly one, with the historic fishing pier
  • White Point / Royal Palm Beach — a beautiful rocky beach with tide pools and a more dramatic coastline
  • Cabrillo Marine Aquarium — free, kid-favorite outing
  • West Harbor (replacing the old Ports O'Call): harbor-side walks, ship-watching, a family park, a Ferris wheel, more on the way
  • Quiet channel walks with real working-port views
Nearby

Worth the Drive

  • ~10 min to Trump National Golf Club (RPV) — some of the best coastal views in the region, with free public access to the grounds and overlooks
  • ~20 min to Terranea Resort — free public beach access via the coastal trail, walkable grounds, dramatic cliffside views
  • Redondo Beach pier & King Harbor, Torrance & Manhattan Beach boardwalks — all a short coastal drive

Plenty to do every weekend — no traffic needed.

05 · The Community

The Community Today

 

Honest picture: the San Pedro Jewish community is growing but still small. You wouldn't be moving to Pico. You'd be joining something being built.

Here's what exists on the ground right now:

Chabad S. Pedro shul
Every Shabbat

Shabbat at Our Shul

  • Shabbat morning services (davening) every week, with a Torah scroll
  • Kiddush — refreshments and l'chaims after services
  • Shabbat morning Torah class, open to all
  • Shabbat meals with the Rabbi and Rebbetzin — call ahead, you'll be hosted
Every Week

Learning & Connection

  • Tuesday evening Torah class (in-person and on Zoom)
  • Wednesday 8pm Ein Yaakov class — classical stories and teachings from the Talmud
  • One-on-one learning with the Rabbi — any topic, any level, any background
  • Women's Jewish Circle — monthly gatherings for women
  • Jewish Men's Club — monthly gathering for Men.
All Year

Lifecycle & Care

  • Holiday services & programs (High Holidays, Passover, Chanukah, Purim, and more)
  • Brit milah, bar/bat mitzvah prep, weddings — traditional or at your pace
  • Mezuzot (doorpost scrolls) and tefillin assistance
  • Hospital & senior visitation
  • Personal access to Rabbi Yisroel Shuchat

If you move here, you won't disappear into a crowd. You'll be one of the families helping build what San Pedro Jewish life looks like for the next generation.

Why Families Are Choosing Here

The Best of Both Worlds

Shape It

You Help Build It

Most established Jewish communities are already set in their ways. Here, your voice actually shapes what grows — the programs, the minyan, the Shabbat culture, what comes next.

Not From Zero

Real Foundation Already

A weekly shul, a Torah scroll, regular classes, a Rabbi and Rebbetzin who host Shabbat meals, mikvah and Jewish preschool within ~20 min. Not a blank slate — a real foundation to build on.

Tight-Knit

Everyone Knows Your Name

You won't get lost in the crowd. Warm, welcoming, and real — Orthodox, traditional, secular, questioning — everyone feels comfortable at our Shabbat table.

The Best Way to Know

Come for a Shabbat

Before you decide anything, come spend a Shabbat. Walk the neighborhoods, see the ocean, meet the community, eat a meal at the Rabbi's table. There are hotels within walking distance of Chabad. It's the only way to really know.

Plan a Shabbat Visit →

06 · The Infrastructure

What's Nearby, What's a Drive

 

Being honest about the infrastructure is important — so you know what you're signing up for.

In San Pedro · 0 min
  • Weekly Shabbat morning services with a Torah scroll, plus Kiddush
  • Shabbat meals at the Rabbi's home
  • Holiday services and community programs
  • Weekly Torah classes (Tuesday evening, Wednesday 8pm Ein Yaakov, Shabbat morning)
  • Trader Joe's on Western Ave — surprisingly wide kosher selection, including pas yisroel breads. Plus access to all the major supermarkets nearby (Vons, Smart & Final, Ralphs, Albertsons), and a bit further out Whole Foods, Costco, and Sam's Club
  • Beaches, harbor, hiking, parks, the new West Harbor promenade
Within ~20 min
  • Kaiser Permanente Harbor City (~13-15 min) — a major Kaiser campus with a full hospital, medical offices, pharmacy, lab, and specialty care. If you're a Kaiser member, everything you need is a short drive away
  • Mikvah options in Lomita and Redondo Beach
  • Jewish preschool at Chabad of South Bay (Lomita)
  • Palos Verdes cliffs and additional beaches
Within ~20-25 min
  • Long Beach Chabad (Congregation Lubavitch) — the closest full Chabad community with daily prayer services (minyan)
  • Long Beach has a women's mikvah, a men's mikvah, and a keilim mikvah (for new utensils)
  • Smart & Final Long Beach — carries a broader kosher selection than a typical supermarket (milk, yogurts, cold cuts, cheeses) for a quick last-minute run; not a full kosher supermarket, but bigger than most
  • Emunah (Hawthorne) — a kosher catering / takeout option in the South Bay; check them out for more details
Within 40-60 min
  • LA Jewish day schools (elementary and high school) — a daily shuttle bus leaves from Lomita, stops in Redondo Beach, then continues to the LA schools
  • Hebrew Academy of Huntington Beach (~40+ min) — a strong Jewish day school option in Orange County
  • A few kosher options in Orange County if you want a quieter trip than Pico
  • Kosher grocery stores and restaurants in Pico-Robertson, La Brea, and the Valley
  • Large Jewish community events, weddings, simchas

The honest trade: you drive a bit further for some things, and you save a lot on where you live.

07 · The Questions

Questions We Hear Often

 

Is San Pedro safe?

Yes — quiet residential neighborhoods, the full range you'd expect in a coastal LA community. Like any city, certain areas are better than others, and we're happy to share which neighborhoods work best for families.

Do I have to commute to LA for work?

Not necessarily. Downtown San Pedro and the surrounding area have office buildings with space available to rent, so many professionals work locally instead of commuting. It's a real option worth pricing out.

For those who do need LA: many residents work remotely or go in a few days a week. The 110 and 405 are the main arteries. West LA is trickier during rush hour than off-peak.

What about kids' Jewish education?

San Pedro itself doesn't yet have a Jewish day school — we're upfront about that. Here's what families actually do:

  • Preschool: Chabad of South Bay (Lomita) has a Jewish preschool, about 15-20 min away.
  • Elementary / high school: a daily shuttle bus runs to the LA Jewish day schools — it leaves from Lomita, stops in Redondo Beach, then continues to the LA schools. A reasonable hand-off for San Pedro families. Hebrew Academy in Huntington Beach is another strong option (~40+ min).

We'll walk you through the options honestly.

Where's the closest full Chabad / observant community?

Long Beach Chabad (Congregation Lubavitch) is the closest full Chabad community, with daily prayer services (minyan) and a rich Jewish infrastructure. It's ~20-25 min from San Pedro — close enough for visits, simchas, and overflow needs. As our community grows, we hope to build toward daily minyan here in San Pedro too.

What about kosher food?

Trader Joe's on Western Ave is the standout — a surprisingly wide kosher selection, including pas yisroel breads and a strong range of certified products. Obviously you also have access to all the major supermarkets nearby (Vons, Smart & Final, Ralphs, Albertsons), and if you drive a bit further out there's Whole Foods, Costco, and Sam's Club.

Smart & Final in Long Beach (~20-30 min) carries a noticeably bigger kosher section than the average supermarket — milk, yogurts, cold cuts, cheeses — not a full kosher supermarket, but real last-minute-run territory. Emunah in Hawthorne is a kosher catering / takeout option in the South Bay — check them out for more details.

Delivery: Western Kosher already delivers to nearby South Bay neighborhoods, and once there's a more sizable San Pedro demand it can likely be extended here too — another piece of infrastructure that grows with the community. In the meantime, most families do a monthly or biweekly Pico run.

Mikvah (ritual bath)?

Lomita and Redondo Beach have mikvah options within ~20 min. Long Beach (~20-25 min) has a women's mikvah, a men's mikvah, and a keilim mikvah (for immersing new utensils). No mikvah is in San Pedro itself yet — another piece of infrastructure a growing community would make possible.

Is there an Eruv (the Shabbat boundary for carrying)?

Not yet. This is a known gap; building an Eruv is a real community project that takes halachic planning, infrastructure, and numbers. Growing the community is step one.

What about future Jewish infrastructure?

This is the honest thesis of the page: the more Jewish families plant here, the more realistic local Jewish infrastructure becomes — a local mikvah, an Eruv, expanded daily prayer, more learning programs, more community events. Growth is what makes any of it possible, and we're honest about what exists now versus what's still ahead.

Can I visit the community?

Absolutely — in fact, we recommend it. Come for a Shabbat, walk the neighborhoods, see the ocean, meet the community. There are hotels within walking distance of Chabad for Shabbat stays. Rabbi Yisroel is happy to sit with you and answer any question honestly.

Can you help me find a home or a rental?

Yes. The Rabbi can connect you with a local real estate agent who knows San Pedro well — the neighborhoods, the price ranges, what's realistic for your family. No pressure and no commission to us — we just want to make the process easier.

I'm not Orthodox / not particularly observant. Is this still for me?

Yes. Chabad S. Pedro welcomes every Jew — observant, traditional, secular, in-between, questioning. Whatever your background, there's a place at our Shabbat table.

 
 
Rabbi Yisroel Shuchat
 
Talk Straight · No Sales Pitch

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.

☎ Call 310-935-5236 Email the Rabbi Send a Message

Chabad S. Pedro Jewish Center

817 W 9th St, San Pedro, CA 90731

310-935-5236  ·  [email protected]