First Sonic Drive-In Comes to Ventura County — and Gen Z Can’t Wait
(CLAIR | Ventura County, CA) — The neon signs are going up in Fillmore, and so is the excitement. The very first Sonic Drive-In in Ventura County is under construction, set to open in spring 2026 at the northwest corner of Highway 126 and Orange Grove Avenue.
For young people across the county, that news feels like a long-awaited win. The energy behind it is spreading from Fillmore to Simi Valley — the kind of buzz that says, “Finally.”

Franchise owner Rajpal Behniwal confirmed construction is on track. “We’re trying for February,” he said, “but I would say spring.” (Ventura County Star, Oct. 25, 2025, reporting by Wes Woods II.) The restaurant will bring Sonic’s signature mix of drive-thru speed and drive-in nostalgia to a region that’s never had one before.
Why Young People Love Sonic
To understand the enthusiasm, you have to look at what Sonic represents — not just food, but freedom.
On social media, young fans describe it as “a snack place,” “a drive-in version of carnival food,” and “a fun stop after dark.” The chain’s menu — filled with tater tots, chili dogs, onion rings, and milkshakes — reads like a festival in motion. Add a lineup of slushes, limeades, and milkshakes in every flavor imaginable, and you’ve got something few fast-food spots offer anymore: choice with personality.
One fan summed it up simply online:
“It feels like summer. You sit in your car, drink a cherry limeade, and hang out. That’s Sonic.”
In a culture built around cars, music, and social moments, Sonic hits the right note for Gen Z. Its half-priced “happy hour” drinks, late-night shakes, and retro carhop service turn ordinary evenings into shared experiences — short, simple, and a little nostalgic.


Why Simi Valley Makes Sense
If Fillmore’s Sonic is a success, Simi Valley could be next — and it would make perfect sense.
Simi’s family-centered neighborhoods and strong car culture mirror the conditions that made Sonic thrive across small and mid-sized American cities. The region’s youth population remains steady, and its local economy continues to diversify with new restaurants and retail investments.
A drive-in concept would fit naturally in a city designed for mobility — a place where teens still cruise around town and food almost always comes through a window. Sonic could easily become a positive local hangout, bridging generations through something as simple as a milkshake.
Sonic’s shared experience — eating in your car, chatting with friends, ordering something different every time — reflects the kind of easy, social energy that Simi’s next generation already embraces.
More Than a Burger Joint — A Symbol of Momentum
City officials in Fillmore see it the same way. As mentioned in the VC Star article, Assistant City Manager Manuel Minjares said, “With Fillmore, we don’t always get a new restaurant like this. The anticipation has been mounting over the years.”
That anticipation is about more than one opening. It’s about progress — small signs of a region moving forward, attracting investment, and giving its young residents new places to gather.
Simi Valley, with its mix of family roots and youthful drive, is poised to follow. A Sonic there wouldn’t just serve burgers and tots — it would serve as a signal that Ventura County’s cities are growing together, one cherry slush at a time.

There’s no neon sites up dumbass