Carmet Crest — Oceanfront on the Sonoma Coast
Perched above Carmet Beach on the Sonoma Coast, Carmet Crest offers something genuinely rare: a home where every room faces the Pacific, the waves are audible from bed, and a private hot tub waits in a fenced backyard under an open night sky. Three bedrooms, each with its own en-suite bath, a chef's kitchen anchored by a 48" Wolf range, a fully separate rec room, and 1,000 square feet of oceanfront deck — this is the house groups come back to.
THE BEDROOMS
All three bedrooms have their own en-suite bath — no shared bathrooms, no negotiating the morning schedule.
The Primary Suite faces the ocean with a king bed, gas fireplace, flat-screen TV, and a bath that earns its own mention: a Romeo and Juliet double shower encased in sodalite stone, a material so striking it's featured in the listing photos. Wake up to the sound of the Pacific; the view is there waiting before you've had your coffee.
The Ocean Suite has a queen bed, flat-screen TV, and a full en-suite bath with shower. The window opens onto the front deck, pulling in the ocean view and the salt air.
The Garden Suite opens onto its own private side deck — a quiet retreat from the main gathering spaces — with a queen bed, flat-screen TV, and an en-suite bath with an air-jetted soaking tub and shower.
LIVING SPACES
The great room is designed to hold a group comfortably without feeling crowded. A deep RH leather sectional — piled with throw blankets and pillows — faces a 65" TV and gas fireplace, and the open layout flows naturally into the dining area, which seats eight. Four more seats at the kitchen island mean a full group of six can spread out and linger over a meal without anyone getting squeezed.
The kitchen is the real heart of the house. The 48" Wolf range with griddle is the kind of equipment that makes people want to cook — and the kitchen is fully stocked to match: quality cookware, sharp knives, a coffee grinder, and everything needed from mise en place to plating. The Wolf coffee maker has a built-in scale for a properly dialed-in brew. The kitchen island is where guests tend to gather, bar stools facing the cook, drinks in hand.
French doors open from the great room onto the front deck, so the inside and outside feel continuous on good-weather days.
THE REC ROOM
The rec room is a fully converted garage with its own external entrance — a genuinely separate space that gives sub-groups their own domain without disturbing the rest of the house. It has a pool table, Pac-Man arcade game, large flat-screen TV, and a standing desk workspace. Laundry is here too, behind a sliding barn door.
OUTDOORS
The 1,000 sq ft front deck runs the full width of the house and faces the ocean directly. Adirondack chairs, a double chaise longue, a propane firepit, and a gas grill make it the natural gathering point — for morning coffee as the fog lifts, afternoon sun when it burns off, and evening fires as the sky darkens over the water. During whale migration season (roughly December through April, with gray whales making their return run in late spring), spouts are visible from the deck.
The private hot tub is around back, enclosed in a fenced yard that feels genuinely secluded — no road, no driveway, just greenery and sky, with the ocean horizon just visible if you peer over the fence. It's the kind of place where an hour disappears.
EV charging is available in the driveway via J-1772 connector (NACS/Tesla adapter required).
THE COAST
Carmet Beach is directly across Highway 1 — a two-minute walk, though the path down is steep, as is typical of the wilder stretches of the Sonoma Coast. It's a small, intimate beach: stand at the water's edge and in most directions there's no road, no parking lot, no sign of the built world. At low tide the tidepools come alive — starfish, anemones, and sea creatures in abundance. The staffed state and regional park beaches nearby offer more accessible options with parking and facilities.
Drive north or south on Highway 1 and the coast opens up — more coves, more bluffs, more rock formations, more of that particular Sonoma Coast quality of feeling genuinely remote while being 90 minutes from San Francisco.
THE AREA
Bodega Bay is ten minutes away. Spud Point Crab Company is a mandatory stop for clam chowder; Terrapin Creek offers some of the best farm-to-table seafood in Sonoma County. The Sonoma Coast Tasting Room pours worth lingering over, with bay views. Whale watching tours depart from the harbor.
Thirty minutes inland: Armstrong Redwoods State Natural Reserve, where old-growth coast redwoods create a cathedral stillness that stops conversation. In the other direction: the Russian River wine region, with acclaimed Pinot Noir and Chardonnay producers throughout the valley. Tomales Bay is a 35-minute scenic drive, famous for oysters eaten right at the dock.
The Salmon Creek area hosts a community of working artists — photography, pottery, glassware, leather — with a regular art walk. Duncans Mills is a compact collection of boutiques: clothing, candles, books, antiques, fine art.
WEATHER AND SEASONS
The Sonoma Coast runs mild year-round with less seasonal swing than almost anywhere in California. Temperatures here range from the low 40s on the coldest winter nights to the high 70s on the warmest fall afternoons, averaging in the mid-50s. Summer days typically start foggy and clear by early afternoon, with highs in the mid-60s. Fall is the warmest and sunniest stretch — September and October are when many guests consider the coast at its best. Winter is dramatic and green, with storms rolling in off the Pacific; the deck firepit and indoor fireplaces earn their keep. Spring brings the gray whales and wildflowers along the bluffs. Pack layers regardless of season.
ACCESSIBILITY
The house is single-level. The only step is a small rise at the entry deck; there are no interior stairs.
A NOTE ON THE NEIGHBORHOOD
Carmet is a quiet residential community — the ambient sound is waves and birdsong, not traffic. Quiet hours run 9 PM to 7 AM, and outdoor amplified music isn't permitted under Sonoma County regulations.