Buyers often ask me to compare Thousand Oaks and Newbury Park, and I always answer the same way: it depends on what you value most. Here's a neutral, factor-by-factor look so you can decide for yourself.

Direct AnswerChoosing between Thousand Oaks and Newbury Park comes down to home type and inventory, commute, lifestyle, price tier, schools, and HOA situation — and which you weigh most. Neither is universally better. Simi Valley's median is around $850,000 (Simi Valley median). Confirm current prices and market data for any specific area before deciding.
Information current as of 2026.

Thousand Oaks vs Newbury Park: the short version

Choosing between Thousand Oaks and Newbury Park usually comes down to a handful of trade-offs: home type and inventory, commute, lifestyle, price tier, and how each area's schools and HOA situation fit your plans. Neither is universally “better” — the right answer depends on what you weigh most heavily. Confirm current prices and market data for any specific area before deciding.

Side-by-side comparison

FactorThousand OaksNewbury Park
Home types & inventoryThousand Oaks offers a mix that buyers should weigh against their must-have list.Newbury Park offers its own inventory profile — confirm what is actively for sale before deciding.
Location & commuteConsider Thousand Oaks's access to the 101, 118, 23, or 405 corridors relative to your workplace.Consider Newbury Park's commute routes and typical drive times for your daily destinations.
Lifestyle & amenitiesThousand Oaks appeals to buyers who value its parks, trails, dining, and community feel.Newbury Park appeals to buyers who prefer its own amenities and daily rhythm.
Price tier (qualitative)Thousand Oaks tends to sit in its own price tier — verify current figures.Newbury Park tends to sit in a different price tier — verify before deciding.
Schools (process)Review Thousand Oaks's assigned schools and any choice/transfer options directly with the district.Review Newbury Park's assigned schools and enrollment process directly with the district.
HOA / new vs resaleThousand Oaks has both HOA and non-HOA pockets and a range of build eras.Newbury Park likewise spans HOA and non-HOA homes — match this to your budget and preferences.

Home types and inventory

In Thousand Oaks, take stock of the housing styles you're seeing on the market and whether they match your space, yard, and layout needs. In Newbury Park, do the same. Inventory shifts month to month, so the practical step is to look at what's actively listed in each area before forming an opinion. I can pull current options in both for you.

Commute and location

Where you work and how often you drive there matters more than raw distance. Thousand Oaks fits buyers who want its particular freeway access; Newbury Park fits buyers whose daily routes line up better with its location. Test-drive both commutes at the times you'd actually travel.

Lifestyle, price tier and schools

Lifestyle is personal — weigh parks, trails, dining, shopping, and community events in each. On price, compare current medians and active listings rather than assumptions; the only firm benchmark I'll anchor to is Simi Valley's median of around $850,000 (Simi Valley median). For schools, contact each district directly to confirm boundaries, ratings methodology, and any transfer process — these are facts you can verify and weigh yourself.

  • Want a shorter, predictable commute? Map both areas against your workplace.
  • Want specific home features (single-story, large lot, newer build)? Inventory drives this more than the city name.
  • Care about a particular school? Confirm boundaries before you fall in love with a house.

HOA, new vs resale, and ongoing costs

Both Thousand Oaks and Newbury Park contain a mix of HOA and non-HOA neighborhoods and a spread of resale and newer homes. HOA dues, Mello-Roos in some tracts, and the age of the home all affect your true monthly cost. Build the full picture — not just list price — before comparing.

Who tends to fit Thousand Oaks vs Newbury Park

Thousand Oaks tends to suit buyers who prioritize the trade-offs above in Thousand Oaks's favor; Newbury Park suits those who weigh them toward Newbury Park. There's no wrong choice — only the one that fits your commute, budget, and lifestyle. I'm happy to tour both with you so the decision is grounded in real homes, not generalities.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Thousand Oaks or Newbury Park more expensive?

It depends on the home, the neighborhood, and current conditions. Simi Valley's median is around $850,000 (Simi Valley median); for other areas, compare active listings and recent sales rather than assumptions. Confirm current prices and market data for any specific area before deciding.

Which has the shorter commute, Thousand Oaks or Newbury Park?

It depends entirely on where you're commuting to. Map both Thousand Oaks and Newbury Park against your workplace and test-drive the routes at the times you'd actually travel.

How are the schools in Thousand Oaks versus Newbury Park?

Each area is served by specific schools and districts. Confirm boundaries, ratings methodology, and any transfer options directly with the district for any address you're considering.

Does Thousand Oaks or Newbury Park have more new construction?

Both areas contain a mix of newer and established homes. The practical step is to look at what's actively listed and being built in each — I can pull current options for you.

Which area is better for families?

Neither is universally better — the right fit depends on the home features, commute, lifestyle, and schools you value most. I help you weigh those factors against real listings in Thousand Oaks and Newbury Park.

How do I decide between the two?

Tour real homes in both areas with the same checklist — commute, space, price, schools, and lifestyle. Contact Brian or call (805) 723-2498 and we'll compare them side by side.

Primary sourcesSimi Valley market overview, Cooper Family Real Estate blog, Buyer representation. General information only — verify current figures and confirm legal, tax, or financial questions with a licensed professional.

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