While waiting for final data on the feverish 2017 real estate market to arrive, we thought to step back from homes and, instead, look at the people who
live in them. There is no city and metropolitan area quite like San Francisco and the Bay Area, and here are some of the details. Compiled solely for your entertainment and, perhaps, mild edification.
Depending on data source, these analyses pertain to either San Francisco alone, or to a multi-county San Francisco Metro Area, as delineated on each chart.
Dozens of updated real estate analyses can still be found here: Paragon Market Reports
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Ethnicity, Race, Ancestry & Language
Religious and Spiritual Practices & Beliefs
A Selection of Miscellaneous Data Points
Education, and Income by Education & Sex
Employment, Wages & Commuting
The Bureau of Labor statistics analyzes average annual wages for over 700 local
occupations in the SF metro area. Below is a sampling of approximately 50 of them.
Spending Money
Voting
A Selection of Miscellaneous Percentages
The Ages of San Francisco
Selected Statistics by San Francisco ZIP CODE
Income, Age, Education, Foreign Birth & Homeownership
Looking at this first chart below, you may wonder why neighborhoods like Pacific Heights and Russian Hill do not show up at the top of the income table, and why South Beach and the Presidio do. First of all, the zip codes for both Pacific Heights and Russian Hill include other, much less affluent neighborhoods: For example, the zip code for Russian Hill runs all the way into the Tenderloin, and that for Pacific Heights includes most of the Western Addition. Both zip codes also include many renters under long-term rent control. Both these situations skew their median household income figures lower.
On the other hand, the South Beach area is a recently built neighborhood, not long ago filled with parking lots and small commercial enterprises, but now filled with luxury condo buildings. The condos are quite expensive and since all the buildings have been built since 1990, there is no rent control, which means its renters generally pay high market rents. Whether owner or renter, one has to be earning a very substantial income to live there. The Presidio, and we are talking about the park (which contains rental housing), is under federal jurisdiction, so it too is exempt from rent control, and, of course, since it is right next to Pacific and Presidio Heights, its market rents are also quite high, which likewise affects income requirements accordingly.
Unsurprisingly, degree of education correlates strongly with household income figures.
How Americans Spend the Hours of Their Days
Unhappy Statistics about Crime
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All our reports and articles can be found here:
Paragon Market Reports
San Francisco Real Estate Market Report
Bay Area County Markets & Demographics
SF Neighborhood Home Price Tables
SF Luxury House Market Update
SF Luxury Condo Market Update
Bay Area Apartment Building Market Report