Price & Value
Aptos and Capitola sit just miles apart along the southern Santa Cruz County coast, but the price gap between them tells a story about what each community offers.
Aptos carries a median home price of $1.65M, reflecting its larger lot sizes, more rural character, and access to highly rated schools. Homes here tend to sit on the market for about 25 days, signaling steady demand without the frenzy you see in some tighter markets. Buyers at this price point often find single-family homes with mature landscaping, detached garages, and proximity to trails and state parks.
Capitola comes in at $1.35M with homes moving slightly faster at 22 days on market. That quicker pace reflects Capitola’s walkability and village charm, which attract buyers who want a more social, connected lifestyle. At this price point, you can expect updated bungalows and cottages closer to the village center, or larger homes as you move toward the hillside neighborhoods.
The $300K difference between the two communities largely comes down to lot size and proximity to the village core.
Schools
Aptos and Capitola schools land within the same band. Both have a top-rated elementary around 9/10, and the average across all rated schools comes out essentially tied (Aptos 7.0, Capitola 7.3). Aptos sits in the Pajaro Valley district; Capitola falls inside Soquel Union.
For families, the differences between specific campus picks matter more than the neighborhood average. Soquel High School serves Capitola at the secondary level; Aptos High serves the southern coast. Worth touring both before deciding either way.
Commute to the Bay Area
Both communities sit along the Highway 1 corridor, with similar drive times to the Bay Area. The median peak commute lands at 58 minutes from Aptos and 55 minutes from Capitola, with both routes merging onto the same stretch of Highway 17. Capitola’s three-minute edge mostly reflects its closer starting position to the 1/17 interchange.
For tech workers commuting two or three days a week, neither community has a meaningful advantage. Both benefit from the reverse-commute dynamic that keeps southbound morning traffic lighter than the northbound flow.
Lifestyle & Character
Aptos feels like a quiet coastal retreat. The pace is slower here, with neighborhoods tucked among redwoods and apple orchards. Aptos Village serves as the town center, offering a handful of restaurants, a bookstore, and a farmers’ market, but the overall vibe is residential and nature-oriented. Rio Del Mar and Seacliff State Beach provide waterfront access without the boardwalk energy of Santa Cruz proper. Residents tend to value privacy, outdoor recreation, and a family-centered rhythm.
Capitola brings a different energy entirely. The Capitola Village is one of the oldest seaside resort communities on the Pacific Coast, and it still carries that spirit. Colorful buildings line Capitola Beach, restaurants and shops cluster along the Esplanade, and summer brings art festivals and live music. The community is more compact and walkable, with a social atmosphere that appeals to people who want to bump into neighbors at the coffee shop or take an evening stroll along the wharf.
Both communities offer excellent access to the outdoors, but Aptos leans toward hiking, mountain biking, and forest trails, while Capitola leans toward beach life, paddleboarding, and village dining.