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.
Smart landlords are capitalizing on neighbourhood renewal, affordable entry points and tech-sector spillover to unlock returns the Mission and Marina can no longer deliver.
As San Francisco's median home price hovers near $1.3 million, newly approved planning decisions are beginning to crack the affordability crisis—but not without market friction.
As tech money returns and ownership costs soar past $1.3 million median, landlords and tenants in Pacific Heights and beyond find themselves locked in an increasingly precarious dance.
Recent sales data reveals a widening gap between market reality and policy ambition—and hints at where the next fight over affordability will be fought.
As vacancy rates tighten across the city, the once-industrial waterfront neighbourhood is attracting landlords and tenants alike—with rents climbing and yields improving.
As major projects transform areas like Dogpatch and the Mission, first-time buyers now have fresh pathways into the market—if they know where to look and what support exists.
A wave of new apartment developments across Mission Bay and Dogpatch is forcing both property owners and renters to recalibrate their strategies in a market that finally feels less like a landlord's playground.
With tech talent returning and median prices holding firm, first-home buyers need to understand the forces reshaping the market—and the financing tools actually within reach.
As yields tighten and tenant protections strengthen, San Francisco's property investors face a delicate balancing act between profitability and retention.