The Chino/Chino Hills area commands the highest ADU rents in the service area — a 1BR ADU in Chino Hills realistically earns $2,100–$2,600/month; City of Chino runs $1,900–$2,400. Hillside Chino Hills units with views add $300–$500/month premium. The tenant pool — Ontario International Airport employment corridor, Chino Valley industrial complex, and the professional households drawn to Chino Hills school quality — is deep and well-qualified. The rental income case for Chino/Chino Hills is the strongest of any city we serve.
Two Markets, Two Rent Levels
City of Chino and City of Chino Hills have meaningfully different rental markets despite their geographic proximity. The distinction matters for ADU investment calculations:
City of Chino draws primarily from the Ontario International Airport employment corridor, Chino Valley Industrial Complex (one of the largest industrial concentrations in San Bernardino County), and professionals who work in the broader Inland Empire and want City of Chino pricing. The flat terrain, established neighborhoods, and proximity to the 60/71/91 freeway interchanges make City of Chino highly commuter-accessible. 1BR ADU rents: $1,900–$2,400/month.
City of Chino Hills draws a distinctly different demographic: professional households who specifically chose Chino Hills for Chino Valley Unified School District quality, the hillside lifestyle, and the relative separation from the industrial flatlands. Many Chino Hills residents commute to Orange County via Carbon Canyon Road or the 71/91. This demographic is willing to pay a premium for quality housing and good schools. 1BR ADU rents: $2,100–$2,600/month. Hillside view units: $2,400–$3,100/month.
Rental Rate Table — Chino Area
| Location | Studio/JADU | 1-Bedroom | 2-Bedroom |
|---|---|---|---|
| City of Chino (The Preserve) | $1,500–$1,800 | $2,000–$2,400 | $2,500–$2,900 |
| City of Chino (older neighborhoods) | $1,400–$1,700 | $1,900–$2,300 | $2,400–$2,800 |
| Chino Hills (flat neighborhoods) | $1,600–$1,900 | $2,100–$2,500 | $2,600–$3,000 |
| Chino Hills (hillside/view) | $1,800–$2,200 | $2,400–$3,100 | $3,000–$3,600 |
| Butterfield Ranch | $1,600–$1,900 | $2,200–$2,600 | $2,700–$3,100 |
What Drives the Chino Hills Premium
School district quality: Chino Valley Unified is consistently ranked among San Bernardino County's top districts. Professional families with children make school access a primary rental criterion — and they pay for proximity to good schools. An ADU in Chino Hills near Los Serranos or Rolling Ridge Elementary commands rent from families who've specifically chosen the school attendance zone.
View premiums: Chino Hills hillside properties with views of the San Gabriel Valley, Pomona Valley, or open space preserve carry genuine rental premiums. A well-finished 1BR with a hillside view and covered porch earns $300–$500/month more than a comparable unit on a flat lot with no view. This is among the strongest view premiums in the service area.
OC commuter access: Carbon Canyon Road (SR-142) connects Chino Hills directly to Brea and Orange County. Tenants who work in Orange County but can't afford OC rents rent in Chino Hills for the commute access. This creates demand from a demographic willing to pay premium rents compared to comparable San Bernardino County housing.
Operating Cost Reality
Higher rents come with higher construction costs — Chino Hills VHFHSZ fire-resistant construction adds $8,000–$18,000 to project cost, and hillside geotechnical work can add $15,000–$40,000 on steep lots. Factor these into your return calculation. On a City of Chino flat lot without fire zone complications, the cost/income ratio is more favorable than Chino Hills — lower construction cost, nearly comparable rent.
Chino/Chino Hills ADUs generate the strongest gross rental income we see. The free consultation runs the full calculation — rent projection, construction cost, fire zone additions, geotechnical assessment — so you see the complete return picture for your specific parcel.
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