Signal Hill is its own incorporated city, completely surrounded by Long Beach, sitting atop the highest point in the area at roughly 365 feet above sea level. The elevation is the whole story: from the right street, residents get sweeping views stretching from the San Gabriel Mountains to Catalina Island, the Long Beach skyline, and the Pacific beyond. It's a small city — just over two square miles — with a population of around 11,000, but its location gives it an outsized presence on the map.
Signal Hill earned its name and its fortune from oil. The 1921 discovery of one of the richest oil fields in the world transformed the hill virtually overnight, and for decades it bristled with derricks, earning it the nickname "Porcupine Hill." Many of those wells are still pumping today, tucked between newer residential development — a visible reminder of the city's origins that locals have largely made peace with. Hilltop Park, with its viewing platform and walking paths, is the modern-day expression of the same geography that made Signal Hill valuable a century ago.
Signal Hill's housing stock is a genuine mix: large apartment and condo buildings make up a substantial share of inventory, alongside single-family homes, townhomes, and duplexes. The median home price runs in the $700,000s, with hillside properties in neighborhoods like Crescent Heights commanding a premium for unobstructed views. Compared to similarly view-driven hillside markets elsewhere in Los Angeles County, Signal Hill remains relatively accessible.
Signal Hill is residential and low-key by design, with most dining, nightlife, and shopping a short drive into the surrounding Long Beach neighborhoods — Bixby Knolls, California Heights, and Zaferia are all just minutes away. Within the city itself, Hilltop Park and the network of hillside streets are the main draw, popular with walkers, runners, and cyclists who want elevation and a view as part of their daily routine. The Signal Hill Petroleum Walking & Bike Trail connects several of the city's parks along a former oil-field right-of-way.
Signal Hill is served by Long Beach Unified School District. Alvarado Elementary and Bixby Elementary School are both highly rated options within the city, with students continuing on to LBUSD middle and high schools.
Signal Hill's central location — bordered by the 405 and 710 freeways — makes it one of the more convenient bases in the area for commuters, with quick access to both downtown Long Beach and points north toward Los Angeles. The hillside street layout means some routes are circuitous by design, but the tradeoff is the view from nearly every elevated block.
Signal Hill works well for buyers who want elevation, views, and a small-city feel without leaving the Long Beach area behind. The oil history is part of the package — some buyers love the character, while others prefer to look elsewhere. For those who don't mind sharing the hill with a working pumpjack or two, the payoff is some of the best long-range views in coastal Los Angeles County at a price point well below comparable view properties in Palos Verdes or the Hollywood Hills.
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