Buyers relocating to the Conejo Valley almost always end up with the same two finalists: Westlake Village and Thousand Oaks. They share a border, a freeway, and a school-quality reputation, but they live differently. Here's the honest comparison.
The short version
Westlake Village is the polished one: master-planned around a lake, with country-club energy, guard-gated enclaves like North Ranch nearby, and a dining scene that puts on a blazer. Thousand Oaks is the roomy one: bigger, more varied, a third of it preserved open space, with trailheads at the end of ordinary streets and a price of entry that starts lower.
Lifestyle & feel
Westlake Village runs on an easy resort rhythm: lake mornings, golf afternoons, dinner at the Landing. Thousand Oaks feels like a hometown that happens to have mountains in it, with youth sports, the Civic Arts Plaza, and oaks everywhere the city's name promised.
Homes & budgets
Both cities range wide, but broadly: Thousand Oaks opens the door around the high-$700Ks and climbs through view properties past $2M, while Westlake Village generally starts higher and reaches further. Lakefront homes and estate enclaves stretch well past $3M. (Ranges are market context, not a quote. Ask for a current read.)
The commute question
It's a tie. Both sit on the 101 corridor; your real variable is which side of the city you choose, not which city. If your life points toward LA, the eastern edges of either city save you ten minutes a day.
How to choose
Visit both on a Saturday. Walk the lake in Westlake Village, then drive the open-space edges of Thousand Oaks. One of them will feel like yours by lunch. If it doesn't, Chelsea has eight more neighborhoods to show you.