Sometimes, as much as we love San Francisco, we have to get out of the city. Touch grass. Drink wine. Buy tourist tchotchkes.
And we know you, dear readers, love to travel, too. So this year we checked out a bunch of underappreciated destinations that are easily accessible from the Bay Area.
These are the seven we think you should put on your 2026 travel bucket list.
Source: Ruby Wallau for The Standard
Paso Robles, five hours from the Bay Area by train, is looking to cultivate new generations of wine-lovers.
2. Tired of cold San Francisco? Head to Chico, where it’s hot as hell (and chill AF)
Source: Amanda Andrade-Rhoades/The Standard
Have you been sleeping on Chico? You should remedy that. A craft brewing powerhouse with easy access to the Sierra foothills, Chico is a great place to escape the coast’s relentless chill.
3. The Marin coast’s best eating enclave has gotten even better
Maria Villanueva grills oysters at the Marshall Store in Tomales Bay. | Source: Brian Feulner for The Standard
The tiny town of Marshall along Tomales Bay is home to the stylish Lodge at Marconi. Start your culinary road trip here.
4. The tiniest, chillest town you can fly to from the Bay Area — for only $99
Source: Mark McKenna for The Standard
Crescent City is as far north as you can go on the coast before hitting Oregon. It’s a strange place that’s worth visiting.
5. Why Bakersfield should be high on your road-trip list. Yes, really
Source: Jennifer Emerling for The Standard
Bakersfield is much more than a way station to Southern California. It’s full of Basque food and vintage dive bars, and home to the state’s most affordable historic hotel.
6. Chasing the nostalgic ideal of summer at Guerneville’s new glampground
Source: Jason Henry for The Standard
Mike and Kelsey Sheofsky have captured an upscale summer camp vibe at The River Electric.
7. Mexico’s best-kept secret is a $250 flight away
Source: Freda Moon/The Standard
An easy and cheap direct flight from San Francisco makes Guadalajara and three surrounding towns a perfect escape.