Millbrae sits on the Peninsula just south of the San Francisco Airport and has long been valued for one thing above all: connectivity. It is one of the most transportation-accessible cities in the Bay Area. BART, Caltrain, Highway 101, and Interstate 280 are all within minutes, making it one of the easier places to live for people commuting across the Peninsula or into San Francisco. Despite that infrastructure, most of Millbrae feels quiet and residential. The city climbs up the hillside west of El Camino Real, where neighborhoods are made up largely of 1950s and 60s homes. Many houses sit on the slope with wide views across the Bay and toward the airport runways. Streets are clean, orderly, and noticeably calm once you leave the main corridors. Downtown Millbrae runs along Broadway and has a distinctly local feel. The street is lined with restaurants, cafés, bakeries, and small businesses that stay active throughout the week. It is especially well known for its concentration of Asian restaurants, which draw visitors from other parts of the Peninsula. The downtown area is compact but genuinely walkable, and the nearby Millbrae BART and Caltrain station adds steady foot traffic. Outdoor space is not expansive, but the city does have several well-used parks. Central Park near downtown hosts community events and farmers markets, while Junipero Serra Park sits on the hillside with open lawns, walking paths, and views toward the Bay. The surrounding hills also provide quiet residential streets that are comfortable for walking. Housing tends to be well maintained, and curb appeal across much of the city is strong. Mature landscaping, steady reinvestment in homes, and the hillside setting give many blocks a polished appearance. The main visual drawback is the proximity to the airport in some areas, where aircraft are visible and occasionally audible overhead. Living in Millbrae offers a mix of suburban quiet and exceptional regional access. Residents benefit from a walkable restaurant district, reliable transit connections, and hillside neighborhoods that feel tucked away from the larger transportation network below.
| School Name | Type | Grades | Houseberry School Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| Green Hills Elementary | Primary | K-5 | |
| Spring Valley Elementary | Primary | K-5 | |
| Meadows Elementary | Primary | K-5 | |
| Lomita Park Elementary | Primary | K-5 | |
| Taylor Middle | Middle | 6-8 | |
| Parkside Intermediate | Middle | 6-8 | |
| Parkway Heights Middle | Middle | 6-8 | |
| Mills High | High | 9-12 | |
| Capuchino High | High | 9-12 | |
| South San Francisco High | High | 9-12 |
Click links for school listing
info at GreatSchools.org
Houseberry School Score Data
from CA Dept. of Education
Houseberry recommends using these scores as only a starting point, and conducting your own investigation into what schools fit best for your preferences. School boundaries are not guaranteed and may change. It is important to contact the appropriate school district to confirm enrollment eligibility before making any decision to move to a neighborhood.

3.0

3.6

3.6










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