San Diego vs San Jose: Walkability Compared
San Diego, CA and San Jose, CA, side by side. Tier labels describe the average; specific addresses can vary block by block.
San Diego
Walkability tier: Moderate
San Diego offers walkable beach communities and a compact downtown, but its hilly terrain and sprawling suburbs make most areas car-dependent.
What works:
- Downtown and Gaslamp Quarter feature a compact, walkable street grid
- San Diego Trolley connects downtown to the border and eastern suburbs
- Beach communities like Pacific Beach and Ocean Beach are highly walkable
- Climate makes year-round walking comfortable
Transit: MTS operates the San Diego Trolley (3 lines) and an extensive bus network. The trolley serves downtown, the border, and east county but misses coastal areas.
What pulls walkability down:
- Sprawling suburban development across mesas and canyons limits connectivity
- Many neighborhoods lack sidewalks and safe pedestrian crossings
San Jose
Walkability tier: Car-dependent
San Jose is the largest city in Silicon Valley but developed as a low-density suburban city, with walkability concentrated in its slowly densifying downtown.
What works:
- Downtown San Jose has a walkable grid with light rail access
- VTA light rail connects key employment centers and transit hubs
- San Pedro Square Market is a walkable food and entertainment destination
- Google's Downtown West project will add significant walkable mixed-use development
Transit: VTA operates light rail (3 lines) and buses across Santa Clara County. Caltrain provides commuter rail to San Francisco. BART extension to downtown is under construction.
What pulls walkability down:
- Vast low-density suburban development makes most of the city unwalkable
- Wide arterial roads create barriers between neighborhoods
San Diego walkability → · San Jose walkability →
Built by Streets & Commons.