Forestville
Home Base · Core Market · Since 1880

Where the Martinelli family has farmed, lived, and worked since 1880.

Forestville is the pivot point between wine country and redwood country. 1,499 total housing units in the entire ZIP. Structural scarcity, rural infrastructure, and nearly four decades of ground-level knowledge. Offered honestly.

37+Years Experience
1,499Housing Units
$440K–$2.5MPrice Range
1880Martinelli Family Since
About Gina Martinelli

A second-generation Forestville broker who knows this ground because she grew up on it.

Forestville is not a territory I study. It is the place my family has farmed since 1880, where I was raised, where I raised my daughters, and where I have sold real estate for nearly four decades.

I have been a licensed California real estate broker since 1990, and I came to this work as a second-generation Realtor. My father built Martinelli Real Estate before me, and I learned what this work actually costs and requires long before I held a license.

My husband George farms 470 acres across more than 19 vineyard sites in the Russian River Valley and Sonoma Coast appellations through Martinelli Winery and Vineyards. Approximately 90 percent of the family's grapes are sold to Williams Selyem, Rochioli, Merry Edwards, and Kosta Browne. When I walk an agricultural parcel in this corridor, I am not reading a soil report for the first time. I read land the way a farmer reads it, because my family does, and has since 1880.

Forestville has 1,499 housing units in the entire ZIP code. It is structurally scarce, not cyclically so. The flood zone dynamics, septic realities, well yields, wine country appellation boundaries, and community fabric are not general knowledge I acquired by moving here. They are the context of my life.

My partner agent Kim Fahy works West County alongside me and specializes in probate real estate. Together we handle what we take on with full attention. That is the design and it is deliberate.

Credentials
California DRE License #01007201
First licensed 1988. Broker since 1990.
Broker & Owner, Martinelli Real Estate Inc.
Broker license #01279937. Company formed August 2000.
Agricultural & Vineyard Specialist
Williamson Act contracts, water rights, grape tonnage weigh tags, AVA designation, soil reports.
Highest closed sale: $2.77M
Working vineyard with detached four-car garage and living space above. Full agricultural due diligence.
Marketing Masters of Sonoma County
Select group of top agents across competing firms. Weekly pricing intelligence.
The Forestville Area

Where wine country meets redwood country, within one small ZIP.

Forestville sits 14 miles west of Santa Rosa and 60 miles north of San Francisco, on Highway 116, the Gravenstein Highway, the two-lane scenic route that serves as the town's spine. The Russian River runs along the northern edge. Heading east from the town center, rolling vineyard hills produce some of the most acclaimed Pinot Noir in the world. Heading west or north, the terrain changes entirely to redwood canopy and river canyon. Two completely different micro-worlds share one ZIP code.

The area is intentionally compact, only 5 square miles of land area, with just 1,499 total housing units in the entire 95436 ZIP. That scarcity is structural, not cyclical. There is no reservoir of undeveloped residential land that will produce a surge of inventory. What comes to market is what exists. The riverside sub-neighborhoods, Mirabel Heights, Hacienda, Champs de Elysée, and Rio Vista, each carry their own character, elevation profiles, flood risk, and price points. Address-level knowledge matters more here than neighborhood-level reputation.

Forestville residents are established adults, not young families. Median age is 44.9. Over 45 percent of adults hold a bachelor's degree or higher, and remote workers were already concentrated here before the pandemic, Forestville had the highest work-from-home percentage in the entire West County corridor. This is a community of deliberate choosers.

ZIP Code
95436
Forestville proper and surrounding unincorporated parcels.
Land Area
5 sq miles
Intentionally compact. A genuine small town, not a sprawl.
High School
Analy High
In Sebastopol. El Molino closed permanently in fall 2021.
Wine Appellation
Russian River Valley
World-renowned Pinot Noir and Chardonnay production.
Market Intelligence

What the Forestville market is actually doing.

The numbers tell part of the story. What they leave out is what an experienced broker brings.

Housing Scarcity
1,499
Total housing units in the entire 95436 ZIP. This is structural scarcity, not cyclical. 93.7 percent of properties are single-family detached homes. There is no pipeline of new inventory. What comes to market is what exists.
Price Range
$440K–$2.5M
Median reached $1.1M in 2025. Most active tier is $700K to $2.5M for well-maintained properties. Mobile home entry point around $246K is a genuine affordability option. My highest closed sale was $2.77M on a working vineyard.
10-Year Appreciation
4.65%
Below 90 percent of California ZIP codes. I tell every buyer this is a buying argument, not a warning sign. It signals this market has not been speculated into fragility, which is exactly what makes it a sound long-term position.
Days on Market
61 days
Longer than urban Sonoma County averages but reflective of thin inventory and selective buyers. Properly priced properties move; overpriced listings sit regardless of broader market conditions. Zillow estimates can be off 15-25 percent in either direction here.
Area Intelligence Deep Dive

100 things to know about Forestville & the 95436 area.

Deep, specific, honest intelligence. Organized across ten categories, grounded in nearly four decades of selling real estate in the community I call home.

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Geography & Location
Insights 1–10
01
Gateway to the West River corridor. Forestville is the pivot point between wine country to the east and redwood country to the north and west, not one or the other, but the entry to both.
02
Sits on Highway 116, the Gravenstein Highway, a two-lane scenic route that is the town's spine and economic lifeline, connecting directly to US 101 near Sebastopol.
03
60 miles north of San Francisco. That distance makes Forestville viable as a primary residence for remote workers and a genuine one-tank weekend escape for Bay Area families.
04
14 miles west of Santa Rosa. Groceries, hospitals, Home Depot, and airport access are all within a 20-minute drive. Far shorter than most rural Sonoma County addresses.
05
Charles M. Schulz Airport is 9 miles away. Regional flights from Los Angeles, Southern California, and the Pacific Northwest make this a legitimate fly-in market for vacation home buyers from outside the Bay Area.
06
5 square miles of land area. Forestville is intentionally compact, a genuine small town, not a sprawling unincorporated district. That scale is itself a feature.
07
The Russian River runs the northern edge. Properties closest to the river anchor the most emotionally compelling listings in the entire 95436 ZIP, and require the most thorough flood due diligence.
08
Mirabel Heights, Hacienda, Champs de Elysée, and Rio Vista are the riverside sub-neighborhoods, each with distinct character, elevation profiles, flood risk, and price points. Address-level knowledge matters here.
09
Heading east from the town center: rolling vineyard hills producing some of the most acclaimed Pinot Noir in the world. Heading west or north: redwood canopy and river canyon, two completely different micro-worlds within one ZIP code.
10, The Town's Identity
Forestville's unofficial motto is "The Good Life", sold on license plate holders at the local hardware store. That phrase earns its place because it captures something real: this is a town people choose deliberately, not one they settle for by default. The people here have decided something. That decision shapes the culture of every block.
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Demographics & Community Profile
Insights 11–20
11
Population 3,264 to 3,768 depending on the source, small enough to be a genuine community where people know each other, large enough to sustain a real downtown.
12
Median age 44.9. This is a community of established adults, not young families. The profile skews toward people who have made a deliberate choice about how they want to live.
13, Standout Fact
45.6% of Forestville adults hold a bachelor's degree or higher, more than double the US average. The resident base is highly educated, values authenticity over status, and tends to invest in community rather than in proximity to commercial convenience.
14
Median household income approximately $103,000, well above the California median. The financial profile supports primary residence ownership at the $700K to $1.5M price tier that defines the active market.
15
71% homeownership rate. Neighbors are long-term. The social fabric holds. This is not a transient rental community, it is a community of people who have committed to staying.
16
Only 14% of households have children, well below Sonoma County's 25% average. Remote workers, retirees, Bay Area lifestyle migrants, and second-home buyers define the buyer profile here, not family suburbanites seeking school districts.
17
Average household size 2.47 to 2.55 people. Couples and small families committed to this area as a primary residence, not singles or large multi-generational households.
18, The Remote Work Signal
20%+ of Forestville residents were already working from home before the pandemic, already the highest WFH concentration in the West County corridor. This community was built for the remote-work lifestyle shift that followed 2020. The infrastructure, the culture, and the community orientation were all ahead of the national trend.
19
Forestville runs politically and culturally progressive, deep blue on land use, environmental protection, LGBTQ inclusion, and community governance. New buyers who understand and share those values integrate easily. Those who do not will feel friction.
20
The top feeder markets for 95436 buyers are San Francisco, Honolulu, and Santa Barbara, lifestyle-motivated, not job-driven. These are buyers converting equity from high-cost markets into a quality of life that those markets cannot offer at any price.
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Flood, Fire & Natural Hazard Intelligence
Insights 21–30
21, Critical Fact
Two distinct FEMA flood zones exist in 95436: the floodway (F1) where active water movement occurs during flood events and building restrictions are most severe, and the 100-year floodplain (F2) where development is permitted but flood insurance is required by lenders. Every buyer should request a FEMA flood zone determination letter for the specific parcel, not the general neighborhood.
22, Living Memory, Not History
The Russian River crested at 45 feet in 2019, 13 feet above flood stage, cutting Forestville off for 36 hours and requiring the rescue of 40 people. A home slid into the Russian River from a steep bank at Westside Road and Rio Vista in February 2025. These are not historical footnotes. They are the benchmarks every buyer in this market needs to know before making an offer on any property in this corridor.
23
At a gauge reading of 33 feet, the Mirabel Trailer Park begins to flood. At 36 feet, Mirabel Park Resort joins it. Sonoma Water publishes real-time river level data, an essential resource I share with every buyer considering a low-elevation property.
24
Austin Creek and its tributaries add secondary flood risk throughout the entire 95436 ZIP, not just near the Russian River. Properties near smaller creek tributaries can experience rapid local flooding that appears in no FEMA flood zone designation but still causes significant property damage. I know which properties have flooded and at what gauge reading.
25
The 2025 CAL FIRE FHSZ map updates, effective January 2026, reclassified significant portions of West Sonoma County into higher fire hazard severity designations. Any property in the wildland-urban interface must be verified against the updated viewer before an offer is made. The old designations are no longer operative.
26
Fire insurance in high hazard severity zones runs $5,000 to $20,000 annually or more. Multiple major carriers have restricted or left the California market following the 2017 Tubbs Fire and 2019 Kincade Fire. I have broker relationships that help buyers understand actual premium ranges before contingencies are removed.
27
Elevation matters more than address. Two homes on the same Forestville street, separated by 4 to 6 feet of elevation, can carry completely different flood risk profiles, different insurance cost structures, and different buyer pools. An agent who reads the address but not the topography will price and advise incorrectly.
28
Forestville's position in the river valley, adjacent to the Russian River corridor, provides more natural fire protection than hillside communities to the north and east. The fog patterns and valley moisture create a natural buffer, a meaningful distinction between specific addresses within the ZIP.
29
PG&E Public Safety Power Shutoffs (PSPS) during high-wind fire weather events are real and can last multiple days. Generators and battery backup systems are increasingly standard infrastructure for West County primary residences, not optional upgrades. I bring this up in every new buyer consultation.
30
The Forestville Water District and Forestville Fire Protection District share an Emergency Operations Center, a mature, rehearsed emergency coordination system. Most buyers never discover this resource exists until they need it. It is worth knowing about before you do.
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Market Data & Pricing Intelligence
Insights 31–45
31
1,499 total housing units in the entire 95436 ZIP code. This is structural scarcity, not cyclical. There is no reservoir of undeveloped residential land that will produce a surge of inventory. What comes to market is what exists.
32
93.7% single-family detached homes. This is almost entirely a community of houses on land. Multi-unit opportunities are rare and priced at a premium when they appear.
33
Median sale price reached $1.1 million in 2025, but that number reflects a concentration of larger sales in a thin inventory market, not uniform appreciation across the ZIP. Individual properties span $440,000 to $2.5 million.
34
The most active price range is $700,000 to $2.5 million for well-maintained, well-positioned properties. Below $700K represents distressed or very small properties. Above $2.5M is premium estate territory with a small, specific buyer pool.
35
Mobile home entry point is approximately $246,000, a genuine affordability option in a ZIP where the median is seven figures. Worth knowing for buyers who want community membership without the full conventional housing cost.
36, The Stability Argument
The 4.65% annualized 10-year appreciation places Forestville below 90% of California ZIP codes. I tell every buyer this is a buying argument, not a warning sign. It means this market has not been speculated into fragility. For buyers who believe in the long-term desirability of wine country and redwood lifestyle real estate, this relative underperformance is the value entry point.
37
Price per square foot declined 11.4% from the prior year in the most recent data. Buyers are getting more structure per dollar than at the market's recent peak, a compelling value signal for buyers who have been watching this corridor and waiting for a rational entry.
38
Average 61 days on market in 95436. Buyers have meaningful due diligence time, but peak interest for any new listing concentrates in the first 72 hours. Well-priced, well-prepared listings with clear documentation move significantly faster than the average.
39
By day 30 without competitive interest, a listing is already carrying a story. By day 90, the stigma of price history is visible on every listing platform as a timeline buyers read as "something is wrong", whether or not something actually is.
40
Sacramento is where Forestville buyers move to when they leave. For those departing, Sacramento leads as the destination, likely a cost-of-living trade rather than a lifestyle preference. Those who leave for cost reasons frequently want to return.
41, Zillow Warning
Zillow estimates in West County can be off by 15 to 25% in either direction. Automated valuation models cannot see flood zone differentials that create value gaps between adjacent properties, Goldridge soil premiums on agricultural parcels, septic condition effects on net proceeds, or elevation differences that change both buyer pool and insurance cost entirely. Any seller who prices from Zillow and any buyer who offers from Zillow is operating on materially incomplete information.
42
STR nightly rates in the 95436 corridor average $585, ranging from $83 for modest cabins to over $2,200 for premium estates. The average is nearly meaningless for any specific property; location, amenity level, and flood-zone status determine actual performance.
43
Well-positioned river-adjacent properties with proper Sonoma County STR permits can gross $60,000 to $120,000 annually. The performance gap between optimally positioned and poorly positioned properties within the same corridor is enormous.
44
Sonoma County requires STR permits for unincorporated areas, and permit eligibility must be verified for the specific parcel, not the general neighborhood or ZIP code. Buyers whose investment thesis depends on STR income must confirm eligibility before making an offer.
45
Detached single-family homes dominate at 93.7% of all properties. Multi-unit opportunities are rare. When they appear, they attract investors and developers at premium pricing reflecting the structural scarcity of the multi-family category in this territory.
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Rural Infrastructure & Due Diligence
Insights 46–60
46, Non-Negotiable
Most homes in 95436 are on private septic, not municipal sewer. Septic replacement costs run $15,000 to $50,000 or more depending on system type and soil conditions. Septic inspection and load testing are mandatory, not optional, before any West County purchase. I recommend pre-listing septic inspection for every seller as well.
47
Many properties use private wells, not municipal water. Well flow rate testing is critical for drought resilience. Water quality testing for arsenic and other contaminants is standard practice. Well drilling, if a new well is required, costs $15,000 to $40,000 or more depending on depth and conditions.
48
Fiber internet from Comcast/Xfinity is available in most of Forestville proper. Rural outskirts may have satellite only, Starlink is now an option but latency varies by location. I confirm connectivity by specific address for every remote-worker buyer before they make an offer. This is non-negotiable due diligence in my practice.
49
Propane, not natural gas, serves most rural West County homes. Annual propane costs run $2,000 to $5,000 or more depending on home size and usage. This is a recurring ownership cost that buyers arriving from urban or suburban markets consistently underestimate or omit from their financial modeling entirely.
50
No public transit whatsoever. A car is not optional in Forestville, it is essential infrastructure. This is a material quality-of-life consideration for any buyer accustomed to urban mobility options, and it is worth stating plainly rather than softening.
51
Same-day contractor availability does not exist in the way urban markets take for granted. Local contractors are in high demand, serve a geographically spread client base, and operate on their own timeline. Buyers planning renovation or repair work must factor realistic project timelines, measured in months, not weeks, into their financial modeling.
52
Private road maintenance is a reality for many rural West County properties. Shared cost agreements among neighbors, winter maintenance challenges, and liability considerations for guests and deliveries require clear documentation and honest buyer education before purchase.
53
Vegetation management costs run $2,000 to $10,000 or more annually depending on parcel size and tree density. This is a recurring ownership cost required by fire safety regulations that most buyers from urban markets have never encountered and consistently omit from their cost-of-ownership calculations.
54
Chimney inspection is mandatory on most West County properties, most homes have wood-burning fireplaces, and chimney condition is both a fire safety and insurance requirement. A failed chimney inspection is a negotiating point, not a deal-killer, when handled correctly before listing.
55
Electrical panel condition and capacity matter significantly in older West County homes. EV charging, outbuilding wiring, home office power loads, and backup battery systems all require adequate panel capacity. Many older Forestville homes have panels that cannot support modern primary-residence electrical demands without upgrade.
56
WUI (Wildland-Urban Interface) designation carries specific construction requirements for new structures and major renovations. Buyers planning significant building work on purchased properties must understand WUI compliance requirements and factor them into project budgets before acquisition.
57
Roof condition and fire-resistant roofing compliance, Class A roofing is required in high fire hazard zones. Age and condition are critical for both insurance eligibility and CAL FIRE compliance. Roofing deficiencies on listings are a common source of renegotiation after inspection.
58
Foundation evaluation on hillside properties, settlement and drainage issues are common on sloped parcels in the redwood communities. This is a non-negotiable inspection item on any property that is not on flat, well-drained land.
59
Drainage and grading assessment on any parcel near creek beds, rapid runoff in wet season can create significant property damage that is not covered by standard flood insurance and does not appear in FEMA flood zone designations. The creek-adjacent property that looks fine in summer looks very different in February.
60
Property boundary surveys in rural West County are often disputed or unclear from old metes-and-bounds descriptions. A survey is a non-negotiable step on any rural acreage purchase where neighbors, fencing, structures, or easements are in question.
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Wine Country Intelligence
Insights 61–72
61, The Martinelli Advantage
My husband George farms 470 acres across more than 19 vineyard sites in the Russian River Valley and Sonoma Coast appellations through Martinelli Winery and Vineyards. Approximately 90% of the family's grapes are sold to Williams Selyem, Rochioli, Merry Edwards, and Kosta Browne. I do not consult a soil report when I walk an agricultural parcel here. I read land the way a farmer reads it, because my family does, and has since 1880.
62
The Russian River Valley AVA was established in 1983 and encompasses approximately 15,000 vineyard acres and more than 70 wineries. Forestville sits in the cool, fog-influenced western edge, the most prized growing conditions in the entire appellation.
63
Goldridge sandy loam is an ancient sea-floor deposit millions of years old. It naturally limits vine vigor, forces root systems deep for moisture, and concentrates flavor in a way that volcanic soils cannot replicate. This is the foundational agricultural asset of the Russian River Valley AVA.
64
The Jackass Hill Vineyard, farmed by the Martinelli family continuously for over 135 years on a 60-degree slope above Forestville, is recognized as the steepest non-terraced vineyard in California. Vines over 135 years old on this specific land.
65
Hartford Family Winery, Russian River Vineyards, Ryme Cellars, Joseph Jewell Wines, and Enriquez Estate Wines are all within or adjacent to 95436. Buyers who move to Forestville do not drive to wine country, they live inside it.
66
The Farmhouse Inn on River Road is Michelin-starred, farm-to-table, luxury resort setting, exceptional small-production wine list. It sets the hospitality ceiling for what this market will support and signals quality to buyers arriving from major cities.
67
Ryme Cellars has been cited by Avengers actress Elizabeth Olsen as a personal favorite tasting room, a small but telling signal of the caliber of visitors this corridor quietly attracts without trying to brand itself for celebrity culture.
68
The difference between a plantable Goldridge parcel and a non-plantable Sebastopol clay parcel represents a meaningful percentage of agricultural land value. No automated valuation model captures this distinction. An agent who cannot identify Goldridge loam when walking a parcel cannot price agricultural property correctly in this territory.
69
Vineyard property due diligence requires: AVA designation verification, Goldridge loam presence and plantable acreage calculation, water rights assessment, existing farming contract review, and wine grape market economics understanding. Most real estate agents lack every one of these competencies. I carry all of them from direct family experience.
70
The Green Valley of the Russian River Valley AVA, a sub-appellation running through Graton and the western edge of Forestville, is one of the coldest wine-growing sub-appellations in all of California. Iron Horse Vineyards, Dutton-Goldfield, and Marimar Estate operate here. Properties with Goldridge soil in this sub-appellation carry appellational premium that standard residential appraisers rarely recognize.
71
Pacific Ocean fog rolls inland every evening through two pathways: the Petaluma Gap and the Russian River corridor itself. This creates summer mornings in the 50s to 60s burning off to warm afternoons in the 70s to 80s, the growing conditions that make Russian River Valley Pinot Noir the most critically acclaimed in California, and the natural air conditioning that makes living here genuinely comfortable through summer.
72
The October Pinot on the River event at Russian River Vineyards draws dedicated wine enthusiasts for a full-immersion Russian River Valley Pinot Noir weekend that is not on the tourist calendar but very much on the wine culture calendar. One of the annual events that makes residents say they cannot believe they get to live here.
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Lifestyle & Community Life
Insights 73–85
73
The Forestville Farmers Market runs Tuesday evenings June through October with live music, not a tourist attraction, a neighborhood ritual that residents actually attend and that functions as the weekly social anchor of the community.
74
Nightingale Breads operates a wood-fired European bakery on Front Street. Potato-rosemary rolls, chocolate chunk brioche, pear crumble brandy cake. Also sells cheese, jam, and salami. The morning gathering place that tells you what kind of people live in a community.
75
Canneti Roadhouse Italiana, Chef Francesco Torre grew up in a Tuscan coastal town. House-made pastas, wood-grilled meats, garden-rimmed fairy-lit deck. The tagliatelle carbonara with smoked duck is the dish to know. The kind of place where chefs eat on their day off.
76
Speer's Market is where locals actually shop day to day. I see my clients and neighbors there. In a community where the professional who sells your house will see you at the grocery store for decades after closing, that accountability shapes everything about how every transaction is conducted.
77
Kozlowski Farms, just south of Forestville on Highway 116, sells jams, vinegar, wine jellies, and fruit butters from the original apple-packing house. A West County institution and a living remnant of the orchard heritage that preceded the wine country era.
78
The California School of Herbal Medicine in Forestville offers public programs and represents the alternative education culture West County has sustained since the back-to-the-land movement planted it in the 1970s, active, living, and genuinely embedded in the community.
79
The Forestville Youth Park Parade in June runs two days of music, bingo, and carnival rides. A community event with nothing to do with tourism and everything to do with a place where people actually know their neighbors and choose to show up for each other.
80
Open studio events in June and October open the doors of working artists living within the ZIP code, a genuine encounter with the creative community rather than a curated gallery experience. The Quicksilver Mine Co. gallery on Front Street anchors the cultural identity of downtown Forestville year-round.
81
Free outdoor WiFi in downtown Forestville, a small but telling infrastructure investment that signals a community that cares about connectivity and about making its public spaces functional for residents who work remotely.
82
Steelhead Beach Regional Park and Sunset Beach River Park provide official Russian River access in Forestville. The community tube float in June, originating at Steelhead Beach, is the annual ritual that marks the beginning of river season for residents who have been doing it for years.
83
Sonoma Pizza Company on Front Street offers wood-fired pies and a come-as-you-are family atmosphere. The Fig 'n Pig Pizza, local figs, prosciutto, honey, raclette cheese, is the dish that converts first-time visitors into returning regulars. Staff keeps raw dough available to keep kids busy at the table.
84
Sunshine Organic Coffee Roasters on Front Street roasts its own beans on-site and creates a custom blend for Tiny Town Café. The honeybee latte is the morning ritual of the community's regulars. A neighborhood coffee shop that does its own roasting is a reliable signal of a community that has decided to invest in itself.
85
Forestville and Guerneville receive 40 to 50 inches of rainfall annually, dramatically more than Santa Rosa's 30 inches. This rainfall gradient creates the lush, green, forested landscape that distinguishes West County from the warmer, drier communities to the east and that makes the land feel alive in a way that photographs cannot fully capture.
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Schools & Commute Reality
Insights 86–90
86, Critical Update
El Molino High School permanently closed in fall 2021. Students in the Forestville area now attend Analy High School in Sebastopol through the West Sonoma County Union High School District. This change is not always reflected in outdated online sources, buyers with high-school-age children should confirm current district assignments with the district directly.
87
Forestville Union Elementary School District serves kindergarten through 8th grade with small class sizes and a community-engaged parent body. The intimate school community is itself a reason some families choose Forestville as a primary residence.
88
Forestville Academy offers an alternative school option within the community, consistent with the broader West County culture of alternative and progressive education that has been embedded here since the 1970s.
89
Commute to San Francisco: 60 miles, 75 to 90 minutes in good conditions, 2+ hours in traffic or during fire-season detours. Highway 116 is two-lane and scenic but not designed for speed. Workable for remote workers doing occasional Bay Area office days. Genuinely difficult for daily commuters, and I say so plainly in the first conversation.
90
Commute to Santa Rosa: 17 miles, 20 to 25 minutes via Highway 116, genuinely accessible for the Santa Rosa employment base. To Petaluma: 32 miles, 45 to 50 minutes. To Oakland: 70 to 85 minutes. Forestville is more connected than most buyers initially assume when they see the map.
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Hidden Gems & Local Secrets
Insights 91–95
91, The Best-Kept Secret
Burke's Canoe Trips originates in Forestville, not Guerneville, where most visitors assume it begins. A day-long self-guided canoe journey down the Russian River to Guerneville is one of the most purely Californian outdoor experiences available within two hours of San Francisco. Most people who drive through Forestville on Highway 116 never know it starts here.
92
Mom's Beach, informal local river access below the main parks, offers hidden gravel beaches accessible by short walks along the river corridor. Residents use these as private front yards through swimming season. Not on any tourist map, not mentioned in any visitor guide.
93
The West County Regional Trail, 5.5 miles of paved path built on an abandoned railroad corridor connecting Forestville to Sebastopol through vineyards, farms, and woodlands, is one of the finest cycling and walking routes in the county. Known to residents, almost completely unknown to visitors.
94
The Russian River Pub on River Road has an off-menu garlic fries dish that has been a local secret since the pub's early days. The kind of specific knowledge that only exists if someone who actually lives here tells you.
95
Rubicon Adventures offers guided paddleboard and SUP yoga on the Russian River entering from Wohler Bridge, a completely different river experience from the canoe run, more contemplative, more intimate. One of the experiences that makes residents say they cannot believe they get to live here.
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Buyer & Seller Intelligence
Insights 96–100
96
Flood zone status is the single most important due diligence item in 95436. Every buyer, regardless of how far the property appears to be from the river, should request a FEMA flood zone determination letter and review FIRM maps with their agent before making an offer. This is non-negotiable in my practice.
97
Septic load test is mandatory, not just inspection. A system can pass a standard inspection and still fail under actual household use. Load testing confirms whether the system can handle the number of bedrooms and the daily usage pattern the buyer plans to impose on it.
98
Williamson Act contracts on agricultural parcels dramatically reduce assessed property taxes in exchange for a commitment to agricultural use. Buyers need to understand contract terms, development restrictions, and tax implications of withdrawal before purchasing any Williamson Act parcel in this territory.
99, Gina's Standard of Care
I address fire, flood, septic, well, internet, and insurance before the first showing. Not after the inspection report arrives. The buyer who understands what they are purchasing makes better decisions and has fewer post-closing regrets than the buyer who was reassured through the process. The professional who tells the truth early, even when complicated, is the professional whose clients come back and refer their friends.
100, The Final Insight
The buyer who belongs in Forestville already knows something is different when they arrive. The fog, the river, the redwoods, the wine country, the community intimacy, the infrastructure requirements, the slower pace, the distance from urban convenience. All of it is part of the same offer. When all of it is known and still chosen, the choice is right. That is what nearly four decades of helping people find this place has taught me. Getting them to that moment of clear-eyed, fully-informed choosing, that is the work.
Why Gina Martinelli for Forestville

What you get when the broker grew up on this ground.

Four things that set this representation apart in the Forestville market.

Generational knowledge of this specific ground

The Martinelli family has farmed this corridor since 1880. My husband's family has been on this specific ground for five generations. When I walk a parcel here, I bring generational knowledge of the soil, the drainage patterns, the water tables, and the vineyard microclimates that a buyer new to the area simply cannot access through any report.

Agricultural & vineyard fluency

Williamson Act contracts, agricultural easements, water rights, grape tonnage weigh tags, grape sale contracts, vine age, AVA designation, soil reports, planted versus plantable acreage. These are evaluation dimensions I bring to transactions that most agents in this corridor simply do not have the background to address. My highest closed sale was $2.77M on a working vineyard with full agricultural due diligence.

Rural parcel due diligence depth

Flood zone differentials. Septic load testing. Well yield and water quality. Fire hazard severity zones. PG&E shutoff realities. Internet connectivity by specific address. Propane costs. Private road maintenance. These are the due diligence items that make or break a Forestville purchase, and they are where my standard of care is not a marketing claim, it is a requirement of working in this specific market.

Broker-owner accountability

Martinelli Real Estate Inc. is mine. I formed it in August 2000 and still own and operate it today. There is no team to absorb a mistake, no franchise system to escalate to, no junior agent to blame. Every representation I take on is mine to stand behind, start to close.

Frequently Asked

Common questions about buying or selling in Forestville.

What makes Forestville different from other West County communities?
Forestville is the pivot point where wine country meets redwood country. With only 1,499 total housing units in the entire 95436 ZIP code, it is structurally scarce. There is no reservoir of undeveloped residential land that will produce a surge of inventory. What comes to market is what exists. Residents include a meaningfully high share of remote workers, and over 45 percent of adults hold a bachelor's degree or higher, more than double the US average.
Why is flood zone status the most important due diligence item here?
The Russian River runs along the northern edge of Forestville, and the ZIP contains two distinct FEMA flood zones, the floodway where active water movement occurs during flood events, and the 100-year floodplain where flood insurance is required by lenders. The Russian River crested at 45 feet in 2019, cutting the town off for 36 hours and requiring 40 rescues. Every buyer must request a FEMA flood zone determination letter for the specific parcel before making an offer. Flood zone status can represent a 15 to 25 percent value differential between adjacent parcels.
What price range should I expect in Forestville?
Individual properties span $440,000 for a small river-adjacent cabin to $2.5 million for a premium estate. The median reached $1.1 million in 2025. The most active price range is $700,000 to $2.5 million for well-maintained, well-positioned properties. Below $700K represents distressed or very small properties; above $2.5M is premium estate territory with a small, specific buyer pool. A mobile home entry point at approximately $246,000 is a genuine affordability option for buyers who want community membership without the full conventional housing cost.
What rural infrastructure do I need to understand before buying?
Most Forestville properties are on private septic and private wells, not municipal sewer or water. Septic replacement costs run $15,000 to $50,000 or more. Well drilling, if required, costs $15,000 to $40,000. Propane serves most rural West County homes, with annual costs of $2,000 to $5,000. Internet varies by address, fiber is available in town, satellite only in some rural outskirts. PG&E power safety shutoffs are a recurring reality. These are real ownership costs that buyers from urban or suburban markets consistently underestimate.
Why work with Gina Martinelli specifically for Forestville?
Forestville is my home base and core market. I am a second-generation Realtor, licensed California broker since 1990, and owner of Martinelli Real Estate Inc. My husband George farms 470 acres across more than 19 vineyard sites in the Russian River Valley and Sonoma Coast appellations through Martinelli Winery, and the Martinelli family has farmed this ground since 1880. I do not consult a soil report when walking an agricultural parcel here, I read land the way a farmer reads it, because my family does. My specialization includes flood zone properties, historic farmhouses, vineyard parcels, and Williamson Act agricultural contracts.
What happened to El Molino High School?
El Molino High School permanently closed in fall 2021. Students in the Forestville area now attend Analy High School in Sebastopol through the West Sonoma County Union High School District. This change is not always reflected in outdated online sources, buyers with high-school-age children should confirm current district assignments with the district directly.

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