Santa Barbara Neighborhoods, Santa Barbara Homes - Click here to view a Santa Barbara Real Estate Area Map
- Santa Barbara West of State Street - Area 20 - Click here to see a Santa Barbara map
- Santa Barbara Bel Air Knolls.
- Santa Barbara Hope Ranch.
- Santa Barbara Montecito.
- Santa Barbara Capanil / Yankee Far
- Santa Barbara Hidden Valley.
- Santa Barbara Mesa
- Santa Barbara Samerkand
- Santa Barbara Westside
- Santa Barbara East of State Street - Area 15 - Click here to see a map
- Santa Barbara Las Canoas / El Cielito
- Santa Barbara Lower and Upper Eastside
- Santa Barbara Mission Canyon
- Santa Barbara Riviera
- Santa Barbara San Roque
Montecito Neighborhoods, Montecito Homes - Montecito is a census-designated place (CDP) in Santa Barbara County, California. As of the 2000 census, the CDP population was approximately 10,000, although the boundaries are ill-defined. Montecito is among the wealthiest communities in the United States and is home to many celebrities. It is east of, and directly adjacent to the city of Santa Barbara, occupying the eastern portion of the coastal plain south of the Santa Ynez Mountains. Portions of the town are built on the lower foothills of the range. Notable roads spanning the length of Montecito include Mountain Drive, Sycamore Canyon Road, and East Valley Road.
Goleta, Goleta homes - Goleta is a city located in southern Santa Barbara County, California, USA. It was incorporated as a new city in 2002, after a long time as being the largest unincorporated, populated area in the county. As of the 2000 census, the CDP had a total population of 55,204, however, a significant portion of the Census territory of 2000 did not incorporate into the new city.
Hope Ranch Homes. Hope Ranch is an unincorporated suburb of Santa Barbara, California, located in Santa Barbara County. As of the 2000 census, the area had an approximate population of 2,200. Since it is not a census-designated place, the boundaries are informal, except where they coincide with incorporated regions. On the east Hope Ranch is bounded by the City of Santa Barbara, on the north by Modoc Road, Hollister Avenue, and Vieja Drive, on the west by a vacant tract of land known as More Mesa, and on the south by the Pacific Ocean. Hope Ranch is similar to Montecito but to the north and west of Santa Barbara. It is smaller in population and has a beautiful setting. It has fewer of the small homes than Montecito and has an equestrian flavor with many shared riding trails. Hope Rance does not have its own commercial district but is in close proximity to the La Cumbre shopping center and upper State Street. It also boasts some very fine schools such as the public Hope School District, the private Laguna Blanca Upper School. The local homeowner's association manages the properties of private roads, horse paths, and the private beach. The region is not governed by conventional police. Instead the law enforcement of the region is the privately enrolled "Hope Ranch Patrol". This group is controlled by the board of Hope Ranch and is in no way connected to either the City of Santa Barbara Police Department or the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Department.
Carpinteria, Caprinteria Homes. Carpinteria is a small oceanside city located in the southeastern extremity of Santa Barbara County, California, east of Santa Barbara and northwest of Ventura. The population was 14,194 at the 2000 census. The Spanish named the area Carpinteria because the Chumash tribe, which lived in the area, had a large seagoing canoe-building enterprise, or "carpentry shop" there; this was due to the availability of naturally-occurring surface tar which was used to seal the boats.
Summerland, Summerland homes - Summerland is a census-designated place (CDP) in Santa Barbara County, California, United States. The population was 1,545 at the 2000 census. The city is famed for being home of Santa Claus Lane, named after a giant Santa Claus bust that overlooked the coastal U.S. Route 101. At the crossroads between art and crass capitalism, the bust was removed in 2003 after being in place for more than fifty years. The bust was not destroyed, but was placed in an emptied lot in the town of Oxnard, several miles south of Santa Claus Lane. Summerland has an oil industry history dating back to the 1890s. There are photographs showing a forest of wooden oil derricks around this coastal town about 1904.
- Click here to view a map of Carpinteria and Summerland
Adjoining County of Ventura. If Santa Barbara home prices are too high take a look at Ventura County, only 30 miles south.