Well-heeled residents lavish love on their historic homes, frequent Fillmore Street’s elegant boutiques, and walk their pups in the hilltop parks.
At the city’s foggy western edge, this orderly grid of colorful homes can claim both the beach and Golden Gate Park as its own backyard.
Years of breakneck development have transformed SoMa from an industrial zone into a tech hub packed with offices, condos, and high-dollar restaurants.
Beloved for its murals and burritos, the Mission is also packed with enough dive bars and music venues to host half the city on weekend nights.
Locals tote groceries up garden-lined stairways, and cable cars ding the bell as they pass local watering holes. This is classic San Francisco all the way.
Known for its post-collegiate crowd that works out in the neighborhood’s waterfront parks by day and parties in Chestnut Street’s bars by night.
It’s got Golden Gate Park to the south, the Presidio to the north, and Clement Street’s noodle joints and indie shops in between.
Locals call this sunny neighborhood full of Victorians and Edwardians “Stroller Town” because it’s home to so many families.
The mansions of the city’s early tycoons have been replaced with apartments, but cable cars still carry commuters up these famously scenic streets.
Tourists have never heard of Potrero Hill, which suits locals just fine. They’re here for the easy commute, bay views, and village vibe.
This list includes neighborhoods that have a minimum of 10 homes for sale. Last updated 4/30/19.