NAPA VALLEY, CA — St. Helena, the Napa County town of about 5,800 residents, landed on a new ranking of the Pacific Coast’s safest retirement communities, earning recognition for its slower pace, active senior population, and access to both wine-country dining and outdoor recreation.
The article estimated that roughly 30 percent of St. Helena residents are seniors, one of the highest shares among the 11 other towns listed including four in the Bay Area.
St. Helena retirees can spend mornings walking through vineyards, afternoons hiking near Bothe-Napa Valley State Park, and evenings dining at restaurants, including Farmstead at Long Meadow Ranch.
The town’s Rianda House Senior Activity Center also helped push St. Helena onto the list, offering classes and social programs aimed at older adults.
Healthcare access remains unusually strong for a small town thanks to Adventist Health St. Helena.
But the ranking did not soften Napa Valley’s fire history. “Napa Valley has been hit repeatedly by significant wildfires,” the article warned, specifically citing the Atlas, Tubbs, and Glass fires that scorched large parts of the region between 2017 and 2020.
The piece also acknowledged the steep financial barrier attached to wine-country retirement, describing St. Helena pricing as “well above the California median.”
But for retirees, the appeal is obvious: vineyards, restaurants, mild weather, and small-town living. The other Bay Area cities listed on the WorldAtlas site included Orinda, Danville, and Windsor.
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