As tech money floods back into the city, community-backed projects in Bayview are reshaping the neighbourhood's investment landscape while preserving affordability.
Tech sector rebound and limited inventory are reshaping Bay Area affordability; here's what prospective owners need to know about grants, financing, and realistic entry points in 2026.
As vacancy climbs and rents stabilise, property investors are discovering that headline returns mask a more complex calculus in neighbourhoods from the Mission to Pacific Heights.
As the city's median home price hovers near $1.3 million, returning tech sector demand and stubbornly low inventory are reshaping who can afford to live here.
Recent sales at the city's highest price points reveal a selective recovery driven by tech wealth, but caution is creeping back into the trophy-home sector.
As median prices across the city approach $1.3 million, savvy first-timers are discovering that Bayview's improving transit links, emerging cultural scene, and grant opportunities make it the neighbourhood where ambition meets affordability.
New residential and mixed-use projects along the eastern waterfront are transforming Bayview-Hunters Point from industrial backwater into a genuine competitor for Bay Area development dollars.
As mixed-use towers rise across Mission Bay and Dogpatch, investment property owners face both rising competition and unprecedented demand from tech workers.
With the city's median hovering near $1.3 million, emerging neighbourhoods offer savvy newcomers a foothold—but knowing where to look requires strategy.
As tech-sector demand returns and vacancy rates tighten, both renters and property owners face a precarious balancing act in a city where affordability remains elusive.
New data reveals how San Francisco's community housing investments are performing financially—and whether the yields justify expanding the model citywide.
As vacancy rates fall and rents climb across the city's neighbourhoods, property investors are seeing returns improve—but the numbers reveal a tale of sharp geographic divides.
Tech sector recovery and foreign capital are colliding with limited inventory to push prestige properties beyond historical benchmarks—but market conditions are shifting faster than ever.
With the median home price hovering near $1.3 million, first-time buyers need to understand every financial tool available—from down payment assistance to state programs.
As mixed-use towers rise across the Mission and Dogpatch, market watchers debate whether new supply can genuinely address the city's persistent affordability crisis.