San Francisco

San Francisco is frequently called “Everybody’s Favorite City,” a title earned by its picturesque excellence, social attractions, differing networks, and world-class food.

Estimating 49 square miles, this very walk-capable city is dabbed with points of interest like the Golden Gate Bridge, link autos, Alcatraz and the biggest Chinatown in the United States. A walk around the City’s lanes can prompt Union Square, the Italian-enhanced North Beach, Fisherman’s Wharf, the Castro, Japantown and the Mission District, with interesting neighborhoods to investigate every step of the way.

873,965

Population

$1,236,049

Median Home Value

$3,771/month

Average Rent

$112,449

Median Household Income

3/100

Crime Index

Living in San Francisco

Perspectives of the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay are regularly bound with haze, making a sentimental state of mind in this most European of American urban communities. The City has a beautiful past, developing from a little town to a noteworthy city almost medium-term because of the 1849 Gold Rush. The authors of the “beat” age, the flower children of the Summer of Love in the late 1960’s and the substantial gay/lesbian populace have all added to making San Francisco the interesting spot it is today.

The City is home to world-class theater, musical show, orchestra and expressive dance organizations and regularly flaunts debuts of Broadway-bound plays and culture-changing performing expressions. San Francisco is one of America’s most prominent eating urban communities. The different social impacts, vicinity of the freshest fixings and focused imagination of the cooks result in extraordinary feasting encounters all through the City. San Francisco has well more than 32,000 inn rooms on offer, from top notch inns and ultra-chic boutique inns to commonplace names in hotel and spending benevolent motels.

Housing Market Trends

With a population of 873,965, 362,354 total housing units (homes and apartments), and a median house value of $1,236,049, San Francisco house prices are not only among the most expensive in California, San Francisco real estate also is some of the most expensive in all of America.

Large apartment complexes or high rise apartments are the single most common housing type in San Francisco, accounting for 47.20% of the city’s housing units. Other types of housing that are prevalent in San Francisco include duplexes, homes converted to apartments or other small apartment buildings ( 21.41%), single-family detached homes ( 19.50%), and a few row houses and other attached homes ( 11.70%). This particular housing mix is relatively uncommon and characteristic of cities that are compact and walkable, and which often have a lively downtown.

People in San Francisco primarily live in small (one, two or no bedroom) units, chiefly found in large apartment complexes or high rise apartments. San Francisco has a mixture of owner-occupied and renter-occupied housing.

The housing in San Francisco was primarily built before 1939 ( 46.78%), making the housing stock in San Francisco some of the oldest overall in America, although there is a range of ages of homes in San Francisco. The next most important housing age is between 1940-1969 ( 25.70%), followed by between 1970-1999 ( 17.19%). There’s also some housing in San Francisco built between 2000 and later ( 10.32%).

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