Three Towns, One Coastline, Very Different Lives
Laguna Beach vs Dana Point vs San Clemente is the decision I hear people wrestling with more than any other — usually from a hotel room mid-scouting-trip, after realizing the three towns that looked interchangeable on a map feel nothing alike in person. I've lived in Laguna Beach for 26 years, and I'll be straight with you: I chose Laguna and I'd choose it again, but it is genuinely not the right town for everyone. Two of my closest friends left for Dana Point and San Clemente, and for their lives, they chose correctly.
So here's the comparison the realtor blogs won't give you — the honest version, including where Laguna loses.
The 30-Second Version
Character over convenience
You want a walkable arts village, dramatic coves, a small tight-knit community, and you'll pay roughly double for housing to get it.
Livability over drama
You want the harbor lifestyle, newer construction, easier freeway access, and coastal living that isn't shaped around tourism.
Space over scenery-per-dollar
You want surf culture, bigger lots, the friendliest entry prices of the three, and a classic laid-back beach town pace.
Which Town Fits You? Tap What Matters Most
Pick the thing you'd protect above everything else. The match updates instantly — and yes, sometimes the honest answer isn't Laguna.
My non-negotiable is…
One-factor matching is a starting point, not a verdict — read the honest breakdowns below before you book a scouting trip.
Laguna Beach vs Dana Point vs San Clemente: The Numbers
| Laguna Beach | Dana Point | San Clemente | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median home price | ~$2.9M | ~$1.6M | ~$1.5M |
| Price per sq ft | ~$1,600–$2,200 | Meaningfully lower, wide range | Lowest of the three |
| Town character | Arts village carved into cliffs and canyon | Harbor town, resort-polished, residential | Spanish village surf town, spread out |
| Beaches | 30+ coves and pocket beaches | Doheny, Salt Creek, Strands + the harbor | Trestles, T-Street, long open stretches |
| Schools | LBUSD — small district, ~2,500 students | Capistrano Unified | Capistrano Unified |
| Freeway access | Two roads in and out (PCH + Laguna Canyon) | Direct 5 freeway access | Direct 5 freeway access |
| Summer tourism | Heavy — it reshapes daily life | Moderate, harbor-focused | Light to moderate |
| Big-box / retail convenience | Essentially none in town | Good, plus nearby Laguna Niguel | Good, plus the Outlets |
Home price figures are directional 2026 estimates from public market data — verify current numbers before making decisions. My Cost of Living & Housing guide has the full Laguna breakdown, including an interactive budget calculator.
Laguna Beach: A Destination That Became a Town
Laguna wasn't grid-planned — the canyon and cliffs forced it to grow with actual character. That's why it feels European where its neighbors feel suburban. You get 30+ cove beaches, a hundred-year-old arts community, a downtown where you can walk to coffee, dinner, and the sand, and a small-town social fabric where you recognize faces within months. The school district is tiny in the best way — four schools, everyone known by name.
Where Laguna loses, honestly: you pay roughly double Dana Point's median for housing. Summer tourism genuinely reshapes daily life — parking, restaurant waits, traffic on the only two roads in and out. There's no big-box anything; Costco runs mean leaving town. And commuting anywhere north via those two roads teaches patience. If your life is built around a freeway commute and weekly Target trips, Laguna will fight you.
Dana Point: The Livability Pick
Dana Point is what you choose when you want the coast as a lifestyle, not a stage. The harbor — one of the few protected marinas in Southern California — anchors a boating, paddling, whale-watching routine Laguna simply can't offer. Housing is more varied and meaningfully cheaper, with more newer construction and gated communities. Freeway access is direct, daily errands are easy, and the town doesn't reorganize itself around visitors every summer.
The tradeoffs: it's quieter in the way that some people find restful and others find flat — less walkable core, less cultural energy, fewer independent restaurants, more spread-out suburban rhythm. You'll drive more inside your own town. And while Strands and Salt Creek are beautiful, you won't get Laguna's cove-around-every-corner coastline.
San Clemente: The Most Town for the Money
San Clemente is the last semi-attainable beach town in Orange County, and it doesn't apologize for being exactly what it is: a surf town. Trestles is world-class, Avenida Del Mar is a genuinely charming main street, lots are bigger, and the Spanish-village architecture gives it real identity. Families get the most house and yard of the three, and the pace is unhurried in a way that's increasingly rare on this coastline.
The tradeoffs: it's the most spread out, so walkability depends entirely on landing west of the 5 and near the core. It's the farthest from OC's job centers, which matters if you commute north. And the cultural calendar is thinner — if galleries, festivals, and a dense restaurant scene are your fuel, you'll be driving up the coast to find them. Often to Laguna, frankly.
A 26-Year Local's Bottom Line
Here's the pattern I've watched play out for two and a half decades: people who choose by scenery alone end up unhappy, and people who choose by daily routine end up staying forever. So ignore the postcard and ask: what does my Tuesday look like? If your ideal Tuesday is walking to coffee, running into people you know, and a sunset swim at a cove — that's Laguna, and it's worth the premium. If it's taking the boat out, an easy commute, and a quiet cul-de-sac — that's Dana Point. If it's a dawn surf session, a big backyard, and nowhere to be in a hurry — that's San Clemente.
And if the answer turns out to be Laguna, that's the move this entire site exists for — start with the Neighborhood Match Guide to find your part of town, then pressure-test the budget with the Cost of Living & Housing guide.
Laguna Beach vs Dana Point vs San Clemente FAQ
Which is more expensive: Laguna Beach, Dana Point, or San Clemente?
Which town is best for families?
Which has the best beaches?
Which is better for commuters?
Is Laguna Beach worth the price premium?
Going Deeper on Laguna
- Zillow — Laguna Beach home values
- Redfin — Laguna Beach housing market
- Public market data for Dana Point and San Clemente median prices (2026)
- Capistrano Unified & Laguna Beach Unified school district information
Fact-check note: Home prices, school boundaries, and market conditions change constantly. Figures here are directional planning estimates — verify current data with official sources before making decisions. The opinions are mine, formed over 26 years of living here, and I don't sell real estate in any of these towns.





