Sell My Fixer-Upper Fast in San Francisco, CA
Fixer-uppers in San Francisco rarely attract traditional buyers or qualify for conventional financing in their current state. EasyOffer specializes in buying homes that need work — major renovations, structural issues, or complete gut jobs. No repairs needed. Get a fair cash offer within 24 hours.
Get Your Cash Offer
Takes less than 30 seconds. No obligation.
Market Snapshot: San Francisco, CA
Latest available data from public sources. Updated .
Median Home Value
$1,394,500
Census ACS 2024
Zillow Home Value Index
$1,258,198
+3.1% YoY
Zillow ZHVI
Median Sale Price
$1,550,000
Redfin
Days on Market
59 days
Redfin
Population
827,526
-5.4% since 2020
U.S. Census
Median Household Income
$140,970
Census ACS 2024
Sale-to-List Ratio
104.4%
Redfin
Active Inventory
76 homes
Redfin
Owner-Occupied
38.2%
Census ACS 2024
Price per Sq Ft
$605/sqft
Redfin
Recent Sales
23 homes
Redfin
Unemployment Rate
6.1%
BLS
Property Tax
$9,862/yr
Census ACS 2024
Median Age
40.0 years
Census ACS 2024
Poverty Rate
11.2%
Census ACS 2024
Avg. Commute
30 min
Census ACS 2024
| Metric | Value | Change | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median Home Value | $1,394,500 | — | Census ACS 2024 |
| Zillow Home Value Index | $1,258,198 | +3.1% YoY | Zillow ZHVI |
| Median Sale Price | $1,550,000 | — | Redfin |
| Days on Market | 59 days | — | Redfin |
| Population | 827,526 | -5.4% since 2020 | U.S. Census |
| Median Household Income | $140,970 | — | Census ACS 2024 |
| Sale-to-List Ratio | 104.4% | — | Redfin |
| Active Inventory | 76 homes | — | Redfin |
| Owner-Occupied | 38.2% | — | Census ACS 2024 |
| Price per Sq Ft | $605/sqft | — | Redfin |
| Recent Sales | 23 homes | — | Redfin |
| Unemployment Rate | 6.1% | — | BLS |
| Property Tax | $9,862/yr | — | Census ACS 2024 |
| Median Age | 40.0 years | — | Census ACS 2024 |
| Poverty Rate | 11.2% | — | Census ACS 2024 |
| Avg. Commute | 30 min | — | Census ACS 2024 |
Why Homeowners in San Francisco Choose EasyOffer
San Francisco's median home value is $1,258,198 (Zillow, 2026), up 3.1% year-over-year. With 827,526 residents declining 5.4% since 2020. homes here sell in a median of 59 days with a 104.4% sale-to-list ratio. recent transactions show 23 homes sold at $605/sqft (Redfin). property taxes average $9,862/year. the average commute is 30 minutes.
Homes needing significant work in San Francisco face a brutal Catch-22: buyers want a discount but lenders will not approve loans on properties that fail appraisal standards. FHA 203k and renovation loans exist but are complicated, slow, and frequently fall through. Selling your fixer-upper directly for cash means no appraisal requirements, no repair escrows, and no buyer financing risk.
San Francisco's housing market is undergoing a historic recalibration — the only major US city where median home prices are meaningfully lower than their 2022 peak — as tech sector layoffs, remote work, crime concerns, and population outmigration converged to create an actual buyer opportunity in a market that had seemed permanently unobtainable. Median condo prices have fallen 15–20% from peak to approximately $1.1M–$1.2M, while single-family home prices remain stubbornly high at $1.5M+ due to extreme scarcity. Contrarian investors who believe in San Francisco's long-term recovery thesis — underpinned by the world's highest concentration of biotech and AI/tech talent — see the current window as generational, while those concerned about population trends and governance challenges remain cautious.
We also serve property owners in nearby Mission District, Chinatown, Bayview-Hunters Point, and throughout California.
Serving San Francisco and Surrounding Areas
Neighborhoods We Serve
Pacific Heights
San Francisco's most prestigious residential address, where Victorians, Edwardians, and contemporary mansions overlook the Bay and command $4M–$30M+, home to tech billionaires, venture capitalists, and old San Francisco money.
Mission District
A historically Latino neighborhood undergoing ongoing tech gentrification tension, where Victorian flats and live-work condos trade at $1.2M–$2.5M+, home to a mix of longtime residents, young tech workers, and artists.
Noe Valley
A sunny, family-oriented neighborhood south of Eureka Valley where Edwardian homes and newer condos sell for $1.8M–$4M+, popular with tech executives and young families priced into the city's most livable micro-climate.
SoMa / South of Market
The dense, tech-office and residential tower district where condos range from $800K to $3M+, though remote work has significantly reduced demand from the tech worker cohort that previously drove its boom.
Sunset District
San Francisco's most populous neighborhood — a vast expanse of identical row houses near Ocean Beach — where homes average $1.2M–$2M and a large Asian-American population prizes its relative affordability and proximity to UCSF.
Tenderloin
SF's most distressed neighborhood, where SROs and older apartments trade at very low prices but the area has seen significant nonprofit investment amid the city's efforts to address homelessness and drug use concentrated here.
Notable Landmarks
Golden Gate Bridge · Alcatraz Island · Ferry Building Marketplace · Painted Ladies (Alamo Square) · Coit Tower · Salesforce Park (Transbay Transit Center)
Major Employers
Salesforce — enterprise software giant whose landmark Salesforce Tower defines the downtown skyline; employs thousands locally despite recent layoffs · Wells Fargo — banking giant with major San Francisco headquarters presence and operations center · UCSF Health — world-leading academic medical center with major Mission Bay and Parnassus campuses · Twitter/X — social media company still maintaining San Francisco offices despite Musk's relocation of HQ functions to Texas · Levi Strauss & Co. — iconic denim brand headquartered in San Francisco · Gap Inc. — retail apparel company headquartered in San Francisco (though operations increasingly distributed) · Lyft — ridesharing company headquartered in San Francisco's Mission Bay
Top Schools
Natural Hazard Awareness
San Francisco faces severe earthquake risk from the San Andreas and Hayward Faults — the 1906 earthquake devastated the city and a magnitude 7.0+ event is expected by seismologists within the next several decades — as well as tsunami inundation risk in low-lying coastal areas and periodic severe drought and wildfire smoke events from blazes in surrounding counties.
How It Works
Selling your fixer-upper in San Francisco is easy with EasyOffer. Here is how it works:
Tell Us About Your Property
Enter your address and contact info. Takes 30 seconds.
Get Your Cash Offer
We analyze your San Francisco property and send a fair, no-obligation offer.
Close and Get Paid
Pick your closing date. We handle paperwork and pay all closing costs.
Tell Us About Your Property
Enter your address and contact info. Takes 30 seconds.
Get Your Cash Offer
We analyze your San Francisco property and send a fair, no-obligation offer.
Close and Get Paid
Pick your closing date. We handle paperwork and pay all closing costs.
Frequently Asked Questions
How bad can the condition be? Do you really buy any fixer-upper?
Yes. We buy fixer-uppers in every condition in San Francisco — from cosmetic updates needed to homes requiring complete gut renovations, new roofs, foundation repair, mold remediation, or full mechanical system replacement.
What if my fixer-upper will not pass a home inspection?
Traditional sales rely on passing inspections, but we buy as-is with no inspection contingencies. Failed inspections, known defects, and structural problems do not prevent a cash sale.
Can I sell a fixer-upper that has been sitting vacant?
Absolutely. Vacant homes often deteriorate faster due to weather exposure, vandalism, and deferred maintenance. We buy vacant fixer-uppers in San Francisco in any state of disrepair.
Why not renovate and sell for a higher price?
Renovating a fixer-upper requires capital, time, contractor management, and market risk. Many homeowners find the cost and stress of renovation outweigh the potential profit, especially with rising material and labor costs. A cash sale gives you certainty today.
Will you buy my fixer-upper if it has unpermitted additions or work?
Yes. Unpermitted work — enclosed garages, added rooms, converted spaces — makes traditional sales complicated because lenders and inspectors flag them. We buy properties with unpermitted modifications as-is.
How do you determine a fair price for a home that needs major work?
We evaluate comparable after-repair sales in San Francisco, estimate renovation costs, and factor in market conditions to arrive at a fair cash offer that reflects the property's as-is value.
What Our Sellers Say
“My mom passed and I inherited her place in Antioch. It needed a ton of work and I live out of state so I couldn't deal with contractors or showings. They came out, looked at it, and had a number for me the next day. We closed in 9 days. The whole thing was so much easier than I expected.”
Inherited Property
“Honestly I was skeptical at first because I'd heard horror stories about cash buyers lowballing people. But they explained exactly how they came up with the number and it was fair. We were behind on payments and they got everything done in a week. No last-minute changes, no surprises at closing.”
Avoided Foreclosure
“My husband got transferred to Dallas and we had about three weeks to figure out the house. A friend told us about EasyOffer. They gave us a cash offer that same afternoon and worked around our move date. We closed 11 days later without having to do a single showing or open house.”
Job Relocation
