Drive-time mapping · California · Neighborhood trade area

10 Minutes From Long Beach, CA

Ten minutes is the threshold where customers begin making deliberate trips rather than incidental ones. This zone drives a significant share of weekly repeat visits for fitness, fast-casual, and neighborhood grocery.

33.7701° N · 118.1937° W · Long Beach city center

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Coverage analysis

What 10 minutes covers in Long Beach.

Port-hemmed and ocean-backed, Long Beach isochrones are fundamentally north-facing, with the Port of Long Beach and San Pedro Bay eliminating southward reach and the I-710's truck traffic throttling northward speed.

At 10 minutes, the Long Beach isochrone captures the neighborhood trade area — the area where customers make routine, repeat visits without deliberate trip planning. Unlike a 12–30 km² in open suburban markets; highly compressed in dense urban grids circle, the real road-network polygon follows Long Beach's actual highway corridors, accounts for bridge and interchange chokepoints, and respects the natural and built barriers that force drivers to detour.

Best-fit categories at 10 minutes: Fast-casual, fitness, neighborhood grocery, nail & hair, dry cleaning, tutoring. The 10-minute isochrone is the standard input for footprint mapping and proximity-marketing radius decisions.

The city-level population of 466,742 and a median household income of $65,000 give a sense of Long Beach's economic density, but the figure that matters for site selection is the population inside the polygon — not the city as a whole. That number shifts dramatically depending on whether you're drawing from a high-density urban core or a lower-density suburban corridor. Use the tool above to set your actual candidate location, then generate the isochrone to see the real catchment.

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