@barbaradowner5746 It is bitter sweet to see it grow & I don't want quality of life to go down. I'm hopeful that City of Roseville can manage this well in the coming years. They have a lot more houses planned. It's grown so much in my 35+ years here! Thanks for watching, let us know if we can ever be of assistance to you...we have lots of local vendor recommendations 😉
1 year later and people are still coming. Roseville is also encouraging the development of tons of apartments and low income and affordable housing. I would look into selling and relocating to Rocklin, Granite Bay, Loomis. Roseville will no longer be part of that core Placer County affluent cities. Lincoln will go the way of Roseville too. They have tons of land and will be welcome everybody for the revenue.
@andrealie3199 thanks for watching! We have so much to do & access. Locally you have Folsom Lake, Lake Natoma and the Sacramento & American River. You are 2 hours from the Bay area for ocean. And so many weekend trips you can easily take to Napa Wine Country, the coastline (Monterey & Santa Cruz), Yosemite is absolutely gorgeous, the Redwoods to see the big trees, Lake Tahoe is another sight to see within a couple hours (snow in the winter, stunning lake/waterfalls in the summer. We have the Sacramento International airport, so you are also just a quick 1 hour flight to SoCal, Vegas, Arizona, or direct flights to Hawaii. Check out the video below where you can learn much about why people choose to live in Roseville. th-cam.com/video/ktGrbFxtAJE/w-d-xo.htmlsi=Z_adh8JasIzYS-ce And you can check out our Sacramento CA playlist that has tons of helpful content: th-cam.com/play/PLVtWbXsgFqJEzKylmlS5dMgACX2xl85GO.html&si=2zjB04ltSZdjiHTj
I wish I could freeze our spring weather minus the allergies lol. And yes, we feel the pros outweigh the cons, Roseville is a great community to live in!
@@livinginsacramentosuburbs The flowers , many there 🥰 Also not a commuter area like the Conejo Valley where people roll in their garage at night The first locals of Conejo have grandchildren , and sort of cliquish , they have been here for 60 years LOL! Everything is right there in Roseville , any recreation and Yosemie not too far away 🥰 Close enough to Pebble Beach to drive there once in awhile 🥰
I was thinking of moving to Roseville because back in the early 2000s, that area was always the posh and "rich" area of Sacramento. If you are as old as I am, mentioning Roseville while in Sacramento instantly gave a reaction like "ok watch out rich person". My recent dive into how Roseville is doing now shows its not that way anymore. It seems that the city has prioritized density and affordable housing. Most of the new developments have smaller lots and are generally smaller homes. They are also now mostly priced as starter or mid level homes. Gone are the mid to higher end homes. Bigger homes on big lots. The demographics being catered to the area is more for those starting on a middle to lower middle class income. Again I'm old so I know how Roseville USED to be. The popularity and reputation of roseville is built on my generation and how Roseville used to be. Now it gives many who were on the outside looking in to be included. But this inclusivity is changing the climate of the city. More dense neighborhoods, catering to cultures that do more multigen living has contributed to the tons of traffic. Median home values has lowered obviously as there is a lack of more high end big homes. I was appalled to also see how many apartments they are building. And even more so how many are low income/affordable apartments. This is clearly is a realtor channel so I know for realtors its money in the bank because they can sway many to Roseville with more of the cheaper starter homes and sell them on the great reputation and history Roseville has had for an easy sell. But for the upper middle class and above who wanted to come to what they thought was Roseville of old will not feel that. Especially in West Roseville. You could find that still in East Roseville, but with the way West Roseville is turning out, it's reputation will take over to represent the entire city. Rocklin stayed more true to how Roseville was in the past. I would be weary of Roseville in 5-10 years. All the low income apartments, I would not be surprised the city promotes and opens up more section 8 vouchers. I see another Antioch, CA in the making. Looks good on the outside because the neighborhoods/homes are all new, but behind the fascade is meh. Watch for white flight and the bigger homes being sold and its a clear indicator along with demographics shift.
@moialder252 interesting take on the city. It's definitely evolved & will continue to do so with the growth planned over the next 10 years, similar to what we see in the majority of the suburbs in Sacramento. Roseville caters to all price points ($500k - $2M) for a balance housing plan. Many of our apartments start at $3000+, so when they build affordable complexes per the State of California mandates, think of those still being in the $2k a month range. We need these so college age students, single parents, ect can afford to live in the area they potentially grew up in or work in, and prices have skyrocketed over the years for our rental market and are more than many peoples mortgages who bought in the 2000s. I grew up in Roseville (East) and what was considered "rich" then is practically the price of our entry level housing now. We definitely have pockets of some affluent neighborhoods, but Roseville as a whole wasn't crazy affluent in my eyes. I'd say what you are describing is more like Granite Bay. Rocklin has done the same a Roseville, but has far less land. They have been building new homes from $600k-$1.5M, and are building more apartments. It's just what happens as areas build out, we see it in Folsom too.
@gyrenereynolds182 I have lots of options, so it's best we talk about what your specific needs would be & I then I can share specific options/videos that will be helpful in your search. Visit www.SacSuburbs.com to book a call with me 😊 or email me at info@sacsuburbs.com
Considering the congestion of the East Bay where I moved from, Roseville is heaven. Aside from the taxes, which I welcome because my kids are in excellent schools compared to most areas, I'll take the few other minor cons in stride. One thing that wasn't mentioned was Roseville utilities...an absolute PRO in my opinion.
@Boostd4 thanks for watching! Yes, it's all perspective of where you come from. Compared to Bay Area or LA we are no where close. We hope that infrastructure expansion keeps up with the growth. We have a pros/cons video on our channel that definitely includes the utilities, a huge win for City of Roseville residents!
Wow, a lot has changed since then for sure. I remember traveling from East Roseville to West Roseville in what seemed like 5 minutes, not it's 20-30 minutes due to all the development of the Galleria Mall area and lots more housing. What do you think the pros of Vegas are over Roseville?
For someone like me, with disability can still have a whole lot of fun. My disability prevents me from driving and other things.@@livinginsacramentosuburbs
@@livinginsacramentosuburbs In El Paso it does not matter if you are rich or poor you will never have a green lawn. It is against the law there to water your lawn because it is pointless. The grass there is brown and crunchy and brittle.
Dang, I do like green. For the most part our parks are green as they are watered with recycled water. Our homes grass is struggling right now with the heat wave & we haven't been watering too much. A lot of people here have gone to artificial turf, especially on new homes when they are designing from scratch.
@@livinginsacramentosuburbs I am homeless and I have a permanent bed in a shelter in San Francisco. I have a job at a bakery and I am trying to get a remote job to go with my bakery job. I want to save up and move to Roseville. I want to purchase a plot of land in Rose or Sacramento that is one or two thousand feet. I don't want half an acre. I don't want an acre. If I purchase a plot like that I want to live on that land in a mobile home. There are lots of cheap plots in California but only in places that are nowhere near a grocery store or hospital. Do you sell plots??
I'm definitely special LOL...a big portion of our viewers are relocating from outside of Cali & like to know the good & the bad of the areas they are considering relocating to!
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Thanks
I’ve lived here for 13 years and I love it, it’s the best place I would ever want to live
That's great to hear @Missing_pasta9 where did you move from 13 years ago? We love living in Roseville ca & raising our family here
Thanks for discouraging people from moving to the most wonderful city. Makes it more pleasant for those of us who live here!
@barbaradowner5746 It is bitter sweet to see it grow & I don't want quality of life to go down. I'm hopeful that City of Roseville can manage this well in the coming years. They have a lot more houses planned. It's grown so much in my 35+ years here! Thanks for watching, let us know if we can ever be of assistance to you...we have lots of local vendor recommendations 😉
1 year later and people are still coming. Roseville is also encouraging the development of tons of apartments and low income and affordable housing. I would look into selling and relocating to Rocklin, Granite Bay, Loomis. Roseville will no longer be part of that core Placer County affluent cities. Lincoln will go the way of Roseville too. They have tons of land and will be welcome everybody for the revenue.
How far for lakes or ocean? Where could you go on weekend trips from it?
@andrealie3199 thanks for watching! We have so much to do & access. Locally you have Folsom Lake, Lake Natoma and the Sacramento & American River.
You are 2 hours from the Bay area for ocean. And so many weekend trips you can easily take to Napa Wine Country, the coastline (Monterey & Santa Cruz), Yosemite is absolutely gorgeous, the Redwoods to see the big trees, Lake Tahoe is another sight to see within a couple hours (snow in the winter, stunning lake/waterfalls in the summer.
We have the Sacramento International airport, so you are also just a quick 1 hour flight to SoCal, Vegas, Arizona, or direct flights to Hawaii.
Check out the video below where you can learn much about why people choose to live in Roseville.
th-cam.com/video/ktGrbFxtAJE/w-d-xo.htmlsi=Z_adh8JasIzYS-ce
And you can check out our Sacramento CA playlist that has tons of helpful content:
th-cam.com/play/PLVtWbXsgFqJEzKylmlS5dMgACX2xl85GO.html&si=2zjB04ltSZdjiHTj
Tahoe...1.5 hours
Folsom Lake...10 minutes
Sacramento River, American River...30 mins.
Gold Country...1 hour
Bay Area 2 hours
Santa Cruz...2.5 hours
I love hot weather , the people are super friendly and plenty of places for recreation
I wish I could freeze our spring weather minus the allergies lol. And yes, we feel the pros outweigh the cons, Roseville is a great community to live in!
@@livinginsacramentosuburbs The flowers , many there 🥰 Also not a commuter area like the Conejo Valley where people roll in their garage at night The first locals of Conejo have grandchildren , and sort of cliquish , they have been here for 60 years LOL! Everything is right there in Roseville , any recreation and Yosemie not too far away 🥰 Close enough to Pebble Beach to drive there once in awhile 🥰
I was thinking of moving to Roseville because back in the early 2000s, that area was always the posh and "rich" area of Sacramento. If you are as old as I am, mentioning Roseville while in Sacramento instantly gave a reaction like "ok watch out rich person". My recent dive into how Roseville is doing now shows its not that way anymore. It seems that the city has prioritized density and affordable housing. Most of the new developments have smaller lots and are generally smaller homes. They are also now mostly priced as starter or mid level homes. Gone are the mid to higher end homes. Bigger homes on big lots. The demographics being catered to the area is more for those starting on a middle to lower middle class income. Again I'm old so I know how Roseville USED to be. The popularity and reputation of roseville is built on my generation and how Roseville used to be. Now it gives many who were on the outside looking in to be included. But this inclusivity is changing the climate of the city. More dense neighborhoods, catering to cultures that do more multigen living has contributed to the tons of traffic. Median home values has lowered obviously as there is a lack of more high end big homes. I was appalled to also see how many apartments they are building. And even more so how many are low income/affordable apartments. This is clearly is a realtor channel so I know for realtors its money in the bank because they can sway many to Roseville with more of the cheaper starter homes and sell them on the great reputation and history Roseville has had for an easy sell. But for the upper middle class and above who wanted to come to what they thought was Roseville of old will not feel that. Especially in West Roseville. You could find that still in East Roseville, but with the way West Roseville is turning out, it's reputation will take over to represent the entire city. Rocklin stayed more true to how Roseville was in the past. I would be weary of Roseville in 5-10 years. All the low income apartments, I would not be surprised the city promotes and opens up more section 8 vouchers. I see another Antioch, CA in the making. Looks good on the outside because the neighborhoods/homes are all new, but behind the fascade is meh. Watch for white flight and the bigger homes being sold and its a clear indicator along with demographics shift.
@moialder252 interesting take on the city. It's definitely evolved & will continue to do so with the growth planned over the next 10 years, similar to what we see in the majority of the suburbs in Sacramento. Roseville caters to all price points ($500k - $2M) for a balance housing plan. Many of our apartments start at $3000+, so when they build affordable complexes per the State of California mandates, think of those still being in the $2k a month range. We need these so college age students, single parents, ect can afford to live in the area they potentially grew up in or work in, and prices have skyrocketed over the years for our rental market and are more than many peoples mortgages who bought in the 2000s. I grew up in Roseville (East) and what was considered "rich" then is practically the price of our entry level housing now. We definitely have pockets of some affluent neighborhoods, but Roseville as a whole wasn't crazy affluent in my eyes. I'd say what you are describing is more like Granite Bay. Rocklin has done the same a Roseville, but has far less land. They have been building new homes from $600k-$1.5M, and are building more apartments. It's just what happens as areas build out, we see it in Folsom too.
OK I'll stay in Malibu. Beach
If you can afford Malibu beach then I'd definitely stay there lol 🙃
Please recommend newer developments in the area? Am considering migration from east coast VA/FL thanks
@gyrenereynolds182 I have lots of options, so it's best we talk about what your specific needs would be & I then I can share specific options/videos that will be helpful in your search. Visit www.SacSuburbs.com to book a call with me 😊 or email me at info@sacsuburbs.com
Considering the congestion of the East Bay where I moved from, Roseville is heaven. Aside from the taxes, which I welcome because my kids are in excellent schools compared to most areas, I'll take the few other minor cons in stride. One thing that wasn't mentioned was Roseville utilities...an absolute PRO in my opinion.
@Boostd4 thanks for watching! Yes, it's all perspective of where you come from. Compared to Bay Area or LA we are no where close. We hope that infrastructure expansion keeps up with the growth. We have a pros/cons video on our channel that definitely includes the utilities, a huge win for City of Roseville residents!
I live in rocklen but I don’t agree with you because it has the best mall in placer county
We highlight lots of Roseville pros in our videos. This one was focused on the cons which people like to know too.
Lived here since 1987 and we learned to enjoy our town, but I wish that they stop building.
Yes it does seem like so much growth still to come. Will be interesting to see the impact over the next 10-20 years
I left in 1999 and love it here in Las Vegas, NV.
Wow, a lot has changed since then for sure. I remember traveling from East Roseville to West Roseville in what seemed like 5 minutes, not it's 20-30 minutes due to all the development of the Galleria Mall area and lots more housing. What do you think the pros of Vegas are over Roseville?
For someone like me, with disability can still have a whole lot of fun. My disability prevents me from driving and other things.@@livinginsacramentosuburbs
Thanks good! Having fun is an important aspect of life, glad you found a community that supports that!
If you worry about these in Roseville. Try Darwin Australia. 😁
@krisvincent If you are talking about the bugs, no thanks lol. I'm not made for those types of bugs to be in my life 🤣
I spent 8 years living in El Paso TX. The hottest it got there was 114.
@@tiffanyalberti2029 with humidity too, that's hot! We currently are in a heat wave & I think we hit 111 last week
@@livinginsacramentosuburbs
In El Paso it does not matter if you are rich or poor you will never have a green lawn. It is against the law there to water your lawn because it is pointless. The grass there is brown and crunchy and brittle.
Dang, I do like green. For the most part our parks are green as they are watered with recycled water. Our homes grass is struggling right now with the heat wave & we haven't been watering too much. A lot of people here have gone to artificial turf, especially on new homes when they are designing from scratch.
@@livinginsacramentosuburbs
I am homeless and I have a permanent bed in a shelter in San Francisco. I have a job at a bakery and I am trying to get a remote job to go with my bakery job. I want to save up and move to Roseville. I want to purchase a plot of land in Rose or Sacramento that is one or two thousand feet. I don't want half an acre. I don't want an acre. If I purchase a plot like that I want to live on that land in a mobile home. There are lots of cheap plots in California but only in places that are nowhere near a grocery store or hospital. Do you sell plots??
@tiffanyalberti2029 we sell land. Plots of land are hard to come by for affordable prices these days & they are normally larger pieces of land.
i’m literally moving there rn
@DaSilvaa1 nice, what neighborhood are you moving too?
yes, please don't move where I live...
@gregthorton4209 🤣
Don't forget the rampid infestation of looney toonies!!! 😮
Definitely gotta watch out for those 😉
What are loonie toonies?
@@janpham487Democrats/Progressives/Liberals/Biden:Harris voters
Are you special or something? That's everywhere in California.
I'm definitely special LOL...a big portion of our viewers are relocating from outside of Cali & like to know the good & the bad of the areas they are considering relocating to!