

Marin County,
Town by Town
A practical guide to every community — from the waterfront villages of South Marin to the pastoral wilds of the West. Whether you're visiting for a weekend or deciding where to put down roots.
Before You Explore — Quick Orientation
South Marin
Waterfront villages · Bay views · Gateway from San Francisco"The Mediterranean of the Bay" — Marin's most-visited town
Marin's most internationally recognized town, Sausalito lines a steep hillside above the bay with pastel cottages, boutique hotels, and houseboat communities. The waterfront Bridgeway is packed with galleries, seafood restaurants, wine bars, and a promenade with unobstructed views of San Francisco. It's as close as Marin gets to a classic tourist town — in the best way.
- Bridgeway — the main drag, walk it end to end; shops, restaurants, views
- Bay Model Visitor Center — free USACE hydraulic model of the Bay, genuinely fascinating
- Houseboat community at Gate 5 — a bohemian floating village worth a stroll
- Barrel House Tavern & Scoma's for waterfront dining with SF skyline views
- Cavallo Point Lodge — world-class eco-resort at the foot of the Golden Gate
- Ferry to SF Ferry Building — one of the most scenic commutes in the country
Affluent bayfront village with the county's best SF skyline views
Sitting on a peninsula jutting into the bay, Tiburon is quieter and more polished than Sausalito — think wine bars over souvenir shops. Main Street's "Ark Row" is lined with former Victorian houseboats converted into boutiques and restaurants. The view across to San Francisco is arguably the best in Marin. You can also ferry directly to Angel Island from here.
- Ark Row shops & restaurants along Main Street
- Sam's Anchor Café — iconic outdoor waterfront dining, on the bay since 1920
- Ferry to Angel Island State Park for hiking, bike rentals, and history
- Tiburon Uplands Nature Preserve — easy bayfront trail with sweeping views
- 30-min ferry direct to SF Ferry Building — a top commuter route
Marin's most exclusive enclave — surrounded by water on three sides
Tiny Belvedere Island is connected to Tiburon by a causeway and is primarily residential — one of California's most exclusive communities. There are no shops or restaurants here. It's worth a slow drive for the spectacular bay and hillside architecture, and it merges seamlessly with Tiburon for all practical purposes.
- Belvedere Lagoon — stunning from the causeway road
- Scenic Drive loop — stunning architecture and bay panoramas
- Attached to Tiburon for all dining, shopping, and ferry access
"One of America's 20 Best Small Towns" — forested, creative, outdoorsy
Nestled in redwood canyons at the base of Mt. Tamalpais, Mill Valley has a different feel than the bayfront towns — it's forested, bohemian, and deeply proud of its outdoor identity. Downtown "The Depot" plaza is a walkable hub of cafés, bookshops, and restaurants. The town hosts the acclaimed Mill Valley Film Festival each fall. Muir Woods is minutes away.
- Muir Woods National Monument — ancient coastal redwoods, just 5 min drive
- Mount Tamalpais State Park trailheads — world-class hiking and biking
- The Depot Plaza — coffee, brunch, farmers market on weekends
- Outdoor Art Club & downtown galleries — active arts community
- Mill Valley Film Festival (October) — nationally respected indie cinema event
- Dipsea Trail — legendary 7.4-mile race route through redwoods to Stinson Beach
Marin's best beach town — surfers, hikers, and weekend escapees
Stinson Beach is the destination when Marin residents want sand and surf. The long, sandy beach (occasionally warm enough to swim) draws big weekend crowds from the Bay Area. The tiny village has a surf shop, a handful of casual restaurants, and a general store. It's the terminus of the Dipsea Trail and connects to Golden Gate National Recreation Area trails north toward Bolinas.
- Stinson Beach State Park — 3.5 miles of sand, lifeguards in summer
- Parkside Café — the go-to breakfast spot; get there early on weekends
- Sand Dollar Restaurant — casual seafood dinner with local vibe
- Dipsea Trail terminus — finish a legendary hike from Mill Valley here
- Bolinas Lagoon overlook on the drive down Hwy 1 — stunning wildlife area
Central Marin
Walkable downtowns · Redwood canyons · Family heartlandThe most convenient town in Marin — shopping hub with bayfront access
Corte Madera is Marin's most practical town — it has the county's best shopping (The Village at Corte Madera anchors a major retail corridor with Apple, Nordstrom, and more), is easy on and off Highway 101, and shares top-rated schools with neighboring Larkspur. It's less about character than convenience, but the Corte Madera Ecological Reserve offers surprising bayfront nature walks.
- The Village at Corte Madera — Marin's largest mall, Apple, Nordstrom, Free People
- Corte Madera Ecological Reserve — bayfront wetland trail, great birding
- Ring Mountain Open Space Preserve — serpentine rock outcrops, wildflowers in spring
- Excellent neighborhood restaurants along Redwood Hwy corridor
Historic downtown on the National Register — the classic Marin experience
Larkspur is what most people picture when they imagine a perfect Marin town. Magnolia Avenue is lined with Victorian buildings (dating to the 1880s), boutique restaurants, wine bars, and the beloved Lark Theater — an Art Deco indie cinema. The Larkspur Ferry offers fast catamaran service to San Francisco. Baltimore Canyon and Ring Mountain trails are minutes away. Described by locals as "a Norman Rockwell painting."
- Magnolia Avenue Historic District — Victorian storefronts, best restaurant strip in Central Marin
- Lark Theater — Art Deco indie cinema, wine and beer available
- Larkspur Ferry Terminal — high-speed catamaran to SF, scenic and fast
- Baltimore Canyon Open Space — redwood canyon trails starting near downtown
- Marin Country Mart (Larkspur Landing) — farmers market Saturdays, boutiques
Serene and central — home to Marin's major medical center
Greenbrae sits at the geographic heart of Marin County and has a calm, residential feel. It's home to MarinHealth Medical Center — the county's main hospital — and the Bon Air Shopping Center. Mid-century and California ranch-style homes dominate. It's less of a destination and more of a pleasant, well-located community that serves as a launching pad to everything else in Central Marin.
- Corte Madera Creek Trail — flat, paved bayfront path, excellent for cycling
- Close proximity to both Larkspur and Corte Madera amenities
- Quick access to Hwy 101 and the Larkspur Ferry
Wooded and prestigious — trails at your doorstep, elite schools
Nestled between Mt. Tamalpais and Greenbrae, Kentfield is a quiet, upscale unincorporated community popular with professionals and families who want serious outdoor access combined with top-tier schools. It's home to College of Marin and borders Baltimore Canyon Preserve. Not a tourist destination, but a wonderful base for trail runners and hikers who want to live near the action.
- Baltimore Canyon Preserve trailhead — redwood canyon hiking, easy access
- College of Marin campus — public events and beautiful grounds
- Highly rated A.G. Bacich Elementary and Kent Middle School
Leafy and storied — grand estates, historic gardens, tiny footprint
Ross is Marin's most aristocratic village — tiny (just over 2,000 residents), leafy, and lined with historic estates. It has no commercial downtown to speak of. The crown jewel is the Marin Art and Garden Center — a sprawling estate hosting galleries, events, a rose garden, and community theater. Otherwise, it's a serene drive-through on the way to San Anselmo or Fairfax.
- Marin Art and Garden Center — galleries, rose garden, theater, events year-round
- Ross Common — scenic town green with historic buildings
- Phoenix Lake — easy hiking loop through oak woodland, very popular
"Best in the West for Antiquing" — storybook downtown with real personality
San Anselmo's Sir Francis Drake Boulevard is one of Marin's most walkable and charming main streets — famous for its antique shops (Sunset Magazine named it the "Best in the West for Antiquing"), independent bookstores, local cafés, and restaurants. It has a distinctly unhurried, community-minded feel. The creek running through the center of town adds to the storybook character.
- Sir Francis Drake Blvd — antique shops, boutiques, excellent coffee and brunch spots
- San Anselmo Creek — walk along the creek path through the heart of town
- Robson-Harrington Park — shaded neighborhood park with towering trees
- Red Hill Books and local indie shops — great browsing and community energy
- Easy access to Fairfax and Mt. Tam trailheads just minutes west
Marin's countercultural soul — mountain biking, live music, and good vibes
Fairfax has a different energy than the rest of Marin — it's where the progressive, outdoorsy, slightly bohemian crowd congregates. The tiny two-block downtown is packed with live music venues, taprooms, independent restaurants, and vintage shops. Mountain biking was essentially invented here — the legendary Mt. Tam fire roads begin at the edge of town. There's an engaged, expressive community feel that's rare in the Bay Area.
- Mt. Tamalpais fire roads — birthplace of mountain biking, world-class trail network
- Sleeping Lady & 19 Broadway — live music venues with regular shows
- Local taprooms and brewpubs on the main drag
- Peri's Silver Dollar — legendary dive bar with local character
- Deer Park trailhead — easy access to quiet redwood canyons
North Marin
County seat · Growing suburbs · More space, more sunMarin's largest city — Frank Lloyd Wright civic center, vibrant dining, real urban energy
San Rafael is Marin's urban core — the county seat, largest city, and most diverse community. Downtown Fourth Street has the widest selection of restaurants (spanning Mexican, Japanese, Italian, Vietnamese, and more) and the most active nightlife in the county. The Marin County Civic Center — designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and a UNESCO World Heritage Site — is a must-see. China Camp State Park and Lucas Valley are nearby gems.
- Marin Civic Center (Frank Lloyd Wright) — free to walk the grounds, docent tours available
- Fourth Street downtown — best restaurant variety in the county, active nightlife
- China Camp State Park — bayshore trails, historic Chinese shrimp camp, kayak launch
- Rafael Film Center — beloved independent cinema on Fourth Street
- Skywalker Ranch (Lucas Valley Rd) — not open to public but the surrounding valley is stunning
- McInnis Golf Center — public golf, batting cages, mini-golf, family fun
Marin's most suburban city — space, nature preserves, and room to breathe
Novato is Marin's most affordable and fastest-growing city — a family-oriented suburban environment with wide streets, ranches-turned-subdivisions, and a lot more space than the rest of the county. Downtown Grant Avenue has a low-key, walkable small-town feel. It's home to five nature preserves, the Buck Institute for Research on Aging, and a strong military history tied to the former Hamilton Air Force Base.
- Stafford Lake — fishing, picnicking, hiking, and day camping
- Rush Creek Open Space Preserve — excellent birding and bay views
- Grant Avenue downtown — historic small-town main street, local restaurants
- Marin Museum of the American Indian — strong collection, free admission
- Indian Valley Open Space — quiet trails through hills and meadows
West Marin
Rural roads · Organic farms · Pacific wilderness · The real escapeWest Marin's hub — artisan cheese, farm-to-table food, gateway to the National Seashore
Point Reyes Station is the beating heart of West Marin — a former railroad town turned artisan food hub. The tiny main street punches well above its weight: Cowgirl Creamery (world-famous organic cheese), Station House Café, Osteria Stellina, and the Saturday farmers market all draw visitors from across the Bay Area. It's the perfect base for exploring the Point Reyes National Seashore — one of the most spectacular coastal wilderness areas in California.
- Cowgirl Creamery at Toby's Feed Barn — iconic artisan cheese shop, taste everything
- Saturday Farmers Market — some of the best organic produce and vendors in the Bay
- Point Reyes National Seashore — elk herds, secluded beaches, lighthouse, epic trails
- Station House Café and Osteria Stellina — outstanding farm-to-table dining
- Toby's Feed Barn — part general store, part gallery, part community anchor
Last town before the wilderness — serene Tomales Bay and coastal trail access
Inverness sits on the western shore of Tomales Bay — a long, narrow estuary famous for its water quality and oyster farms. The town is tiny and quiet, with vacation rentals, a few restaurants, and a palpable sense of remoteness. It's the last stop before Point Reyes National Seashore swallows everything into protected wilderness. Hog Island Oyster Company's oyster farm is nearby.
- Tomales Bay kayaking — calm waters, stunning scenery, oyster farms
- Hog Island Oyster Co. — buy oysters to go or book a picnic table on the bay
- Bear Valley Visitor Center — just south, excellent NPS exhibits on the seashore
- Limantour Beach — a short drive, one of Marin's most beautiful and least-crowded beaches
California's most famously private town — surfers, artists, and those who found it
Bolinas is legendarily protective of its privacy — locals repeatedly remove the highway sign directing visitors there. But if you find it (and you will), it's a genuinely magical, time-capsule surf village on a bluff above the Pacific. The small commercial block has a café, a general store, and a bar. The beach is excellent for surfing. The Point Reyes Bird Observatory (PRBO) is headquartered here. It's Marin at its most untouched.
- Bolinas Beach — low-key surf break, beautiful and rarely crowded
- Duxbury Reef — one of California's largest intertidal reefs, tide pooling at low tide
- Mesa Park and PRBO — good birdwatching territory
- Café Bolinas or the People's Store for local provisions
- The drive via Hwy 1 from Stinson Beach — jaw-dropping coastal scenery
Blink-and-you'll-miss-it — a square, a church, and one of Marin's best music venues
Nicasio is barely a town — it's a green square, a historic white church, and a few houses. But Rancho Nicasio, the local roadhouse restaurant and music venue, draws serious talent year-round and packs in Bay Area music fans every weekend. The rolling pastoral scenery surrounding the valley is some of the most beautiful non-coastal landscape in Marin. It's worth the detour for the drive alone.
- Rancho Nicasio — legendary music venue and restaurant, live shows Friday–Sunday
- Nicasio Reservoir — peaceful scenic drive around the reservoir
- Historic St. Mary's Church — 1867 mission-style church on the green
Lagunitas · Forest Knolls · San Geronimo — the quiet valley between Mt. Tam and Point Reyes
The San Geronimo Valley is a series of tiny, quiet communities — Lagunitas, Forest Knolls, and San Geronimo — strung along Sir Francis Drake Boulevard west of Fairfax. The valley feels worlds away from urban life, with rolling meadows, creek-side homes, and a deeply local character. Lagunitas Brewing Company (the original home of the famous craft brewery) is nearby. The trails connecting to Mt. Tam and Samuel P. Taylor State Park are outstanding.
- Samuel P. Taylor State Park — old-growth redwoods, creek swimming, camping
- San Geronimo Creek Trail — flat, shaded walking and cycling path
- Lagunitas Brewing — nearby in Petaluma, but the brand was born in this valley
- Sky Oaks-Lagunitas trailheads — gateway to Marin Municipal Water District watershed trails
The far northwest edge — oysters, fog, and the open Pacific
Tomales is a blink-and-miss Victorian village on Highway 1 with a couple of restaurants, a saloon, and a church. Dillon Beach, just to the west, is a private beach with vacation rentals and a resort area. This far northwestern corner of Marin feels genuinely remote — foggy, pastoral, and hauntingly beautiful. The Tomales Bay oyster shacks (Tomales Bay Oyster Company, Nick's Cove) are a huge draw for foodies.
- Tomales Bay Oyster Company — BYOB and grill oysters on the bay, legendary experience
- Nick's Cove — upscale waterfront dining on Tomales Bay, great oysters and seafood
- Dillon Beach — secluded, wild, windswept — bring layers
- Highway 1 coastal drive — one of California's most beautiful road trip segments