As vacancy inches upward across the city, both renters and property owners are recalibrating their expectations in a market that no longer favors either side unconditionally.
Rising rents in Mission District and beyond are forcing aspiring homeowners to delay purchases, while landlords increasingly view investment property as a hedge against volatile sales markets.
With median prices hovering near $1.3 million, navigating prestige neighbourhoods requires strategy, patience, and understanding what separates a trophy purchase from a smart investment.
As the city's median home price climbs toward $1.3 million, a shortage of deed-restricted units and shifting development priorities are reshaping where working families can actually afford to live.
San Francisco's Mission District gets 800 new affordable units across two major developments. Learn how these projects aim to address the city's $2,400+ monthly rents.
With median prices holding at $1.3M and demand from returning tech talent reshaping neighbourhoods, high-end buyers need to understand the forces behind current valuations.
As major construction transforms neighbourhoods from the Mission to Dogpatch, savvy landlords are recalibrating rental strategies and capitalising on rising demand from returning tech talent.
With new projects reshaping neighbourhoods from the Mission to Dogpatch, understanding the approval pipeline and timing could be your competitive edge in a $1.3M median market.
Revised financing rules and expanded assistance programs are beginning to unlock previously out-of-reach neighbourhoods for younger buyers—but the math still doesn't work for everyone.
As vacancy rates tighten across the city, Bayview-Hunters Point is offering investors an overlooked sweet spot between affordability and tenant demand.
With three major residential projects breaking ground this year, Dogpatch is cementing its shift from industrial fringe to premium urban destination—and reshaping investment calculus across the city.
From the Dogpatch waterfront to mid-Market corridors, ambitious new projects promise to reshape housing supply and neighbourhood character—but not without tension.
As tech money floods back into San Francisco, one formerly industrial neighbourhood is delivering yields that rival the Mission—without the premium prices.
Expanded grants and relaxed lending rules are unlocking neighbourhoods like Dogpatch and the Mission, but not without reshaping where entry-level buyers can actually compete.
As high-end rental prices surge across Pacific Heights and Marina, a divergence emerges between property owners capitalising on scarcity and renters caught in an affordability crisis.
As vacancy rates tighten and regulations multiply, both sides of the rental market face mounting pressure in a city where affordability has become the defining challenge.