Baker, CA


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Baker, CA

About Baker, CA

Living in Baker, CA is an amazing experience. From the stunning desert landscape to nearby natural attractions like Death Valley National Park and the Mojave Natural Preserve, it's easy to find plenty of outdoor activities to enjoy. For those looking for a more low-key lifestyle, there's plenty of local restaurants, cafes, and boutiques that offer unique shopping and dining experiences. The small-town atmosphere makes it easy to get to know your neighbors and discover a sense of community. Overall, residents in Baker enjoy a relaxed pace of life with access to all the amenities and attractions that make life in California so great. Suburban complex - Southern California, 50 to 80 miles east of Los Angeles and Orange County.

Zip Codes: 92309
Cost of Living:
Time zone: Pacific Standard Time (PST)
Elevation: 850 ft above sea level

Riverside County and San Bernardino County to the north form this metro area. Like many such metro areas in the Southwest, it extends far into uninhabited desert areas, in this case east through the Mojave Desert to the Nevada/Arizona border. Larger than nine U.S. states, it is often referred to as the Inland Empire. Cities in the western portion, including Riverside, San Bernardino, Ontario, and a patchwork of other communities, are developed suburbs of the Los Angeles area with a rapidly growing and increasingly self-sufficient economy.

Suburbs along the I-10 corridor, including Ontario, Rancho Cucamonga, Fontana and Colton tend to be more commercial, while others off the main roads and against the area’s many mountain ranges, like Loma Linda, Chino Hills and many parts of Riverside are more residential. Ontario is also the site of one of the LA area’s best airports with considerable discount air service. Old mansions, public buildings, and packing sheds serve as evidence of the orange-growing industry that once dominated the area, but these have been long since surrounded by housing developments, industrial parks, and commercial/retail centers. Farther east through a mountain gap lie the resort communities of Palm Springs and Palm Desert.

Today the main economic activities include a host of diversified light manufacturing, international trade and offices of overseas companies. Although rising rapidly, costs of living and housing remain relatively affordable for comparable areas in Los Angeles and Southern California. The area is now facing many of the same issues confronting Los Angeles as a whole- overcrowding, sprawl, poor air quality, and long freeway commutes. Bottom line: this area offers many Southern California advantages while bringing the negatives in somewhat smaller doses.

The area is semiarid to arid with dry valleys surrounded by desert mountain ranges. Most of the valley floor to the west is developed. Moving east, coastal grasses and brush give way to desert foliage, including brush, creosote bush, and cactus. The climate varies by altitude and distance from the Pacific Ocean. Summers are warm in the western portion of the counties to extremely hot and dry eastward. Evenings, consistent with the desert climate and with some marine cooling, are comfortable. Winters are mild and mostly dry, but most annual precipitation, including rainy spells, occurs during this season. There are a few days each winter with below-freezing temperatures, but many winters are frost-free. Snow is rare but can occur.

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Baker Cost of Living

Year-round climate, recreation, and diverse economy make Baker a great place to live.

$125,500
-169.4% lower than avg
$28,933
-138.6% lower than avg
4.4 / 8.1
Comfort Index
summer/winter
Baker Crime
50.6 / 100
Crime is ranked on a scale of 1 (low) to 100 (high). US average: 35.4
Minimum annual income
To live comfortably in Baker, California
$24,120
for a family
$43,200
for a single person
Pros & Cons of Baker
   Year-round climate
Growth and sprawl
   Recreation
Traffic and crowding
   Diverse economy
Air quality
Cost of Living