San Francisco Guidebook

Jordan
San Francisco Guidebook

Food scene

one part Hawaiian, one part Californian, and one part Chinese. All fancy.
55 moradores locais recomendam
Liholiho Yacht Club
871 Sutter Street
55 moradores locais recomendam
one part Hawaiian, one part Californian, and one part Chinese. All fancy.
Yum coffee and brunch
155 moradores locais recomendam
Tartine Manufactory
595 Alabama St
155 moradores locais recomendam
Yum coffee and brunch
A dining experience worth every penny.
33 moradores locais recomendam
Lazy Bear
3416 19th St
33 moradores locais recomendam
A dining experience worth every penny.
Two words: Carne asada
347 moradores locais recomendam
La Taqueria
2889 Mission St
347 moradores locais recomendam
Two words: Carne asada
An oldie but a goodie. The chicken is still the best in town
165 moradores locais recomendam
Zuni Café
1658 Market St
165 moradores locais recomendam
An oldie but a goodie. The chicken is still the best in town
My favorite restaurant in the city
504 moradores locais recomendam
Nopa
560 Divisadero St
504 moradores locais recomendam
My favorite restaurant in the city
The best italian food in the city
38 moradores locais recomendam
Cotogna
490 Pacific Ave
38 moradores locais recomendam
The best italian food in the city
A greek staple.
80 moradores locais recomendam
Kokkari Estiatorio
200 Jackson St
80 moradores locais recomendam
A greek staple.
Amazing new spot
12 moradores locais recomendam
Sorrel
3228 Sacramento St
12 moradores locais recomendam
Amazing new spot
delicious fresh seafood, worth the wait
144 moradores locais recomendam
Swan Oyster Depot
1517 Polk St
144 moradores locais recomendam
delicious fresh seafood, worth the wait
Amazing Spanish tapas and view of the bay
29 moradores locais recomendam
Coqueta
Pier 5 The Embarcadero
29 moradores locais recomendam
Amazing Spanish tapas and view of the bay
house-made pizza, pasta, and salumi in a vibrant space.
44 moradores locais recomendam
Che Fico
838 Divisadero St
44 moradores locais recomendam
house-made pizza, pasta, and salumi in a vibrant space.
Best brunch
259 moradores locais recomendam
Outerlands
4001 Judah St
259 moradores locais recomendam
Best brunch
A multi-floored ode to modern Chinese food
31 moradores locais recomendam
China Live
644 Broadway
31 moradores locais recomendam
A multi-floored ode to modern Chinese food
The Ferry Building becomes San Francisco’s prime food destination during the Saturday Ferry Plaza farmers’ market, which brings more than 80 farmers and purveyors to the plaza surrounding the building, selling everything from rare citrus to small-batch miso to Nepalese dumplings. There's much to eat at other times, too. The famed Cowgirl Creamery offers decadent grilled cheese sandwiches, as well as their famous Mt. Tam cheese. The ever-popular Hog Island Oyster Company has an outpost serving briny oysters pulled from its flagship location on Tomales Bay . Also in the building are sister restaurants Boulette’s Larder and Boulibar, known for seasonal cuisine and wood-fired flatbreads. Boulette’s is currently open for take-out, while Boulibar has a 56-seat dining pop-up outside. And Blue Bottle's location here brews some of San Francisco's favorite coffee. Over the summer of 2020, the Ferry Building debuted an expanded outdoor seating area, which can accommodate 228 guests, making the building one of the largest venues for Bay Area residents to dine outdoors.
189 moradores locais recomendam
Terminal de Ferry
189 moradores locais recomendam
The Ferry Building becomes San Francisco’s prime food destination during the Saturday Ferry Plaza farmers’ market, which brings more than 80 farmers and purveyors to the plaza surrounding the building, selling everything from rare citrus to small-batch miso to Nepalese dumplings. There's much to eat at other times, too. The famed Cowgirl Creamery offers decadent grilled cheese sandwiches, as well as their famous Mt. Tam cheese. The ever-popular Hog Island Oyster Company has an outpost serving briny oysters pulled from its flagship location on Tomales Bay . Also in the building are sister restaurants Boulette’s Larder and Boulibar, known for seasonal cuisine and wood-fired flatbreads. Boulette’s is currently open for take-out, while Boulibar has a 56-seat dining pop-up outside. And Blue Bottle's location here brews some of San Francisco's favorite coffee. Over the summer of 2020, the Ferry Building debuted an expanded outdoor seating area, which can accommodate 228 guests, making the building one of the largest venues for Bay Area residents to dine outdoors.
The Proper Hotel is stunning, and this rooftop bar gives you amazing views of the city
32 moradores locais recomendam
Charmaine's
45 McAllister St
32 moradores locais recomendam
The Proper Hotel is stunning, and this rooftop bar gives you amazing views of the city
Dominique Crenn's signature SF restaurant.
22 moradores locais recomendam
Atelier Crenn
3127 Fillmore St
22 moradores locais recomendam
Dominique Crenn's signature SF restaurant.
Cute local mexican restaurant that means a lot to us
115 moradores locais recomendam
Padrecito
901 Cole St
115 moradores locais recomendam
Cute local mexican restaurant that means a lot to us
Cute local italian restaurant that means a lot to us
117 moradores locais recomendam
Ragazza
311 Divisadero St
117 moradores locais recomendam
Cute local italian restaurant that means a lot to us

Museum

813 moradores locais recomendam
Museu de Arte Moderna de San Francisco
151 3rd St
813 moradores locais recomendam
999 moradores locais recomendam
Museu de Young
50 Hagiwara Tea Garden Dr
999 moradores locais recomendam

Neighborhoods

San Francisco’s Chinatown looms large in our collective imagination, and rightly so. Born during the California Gold Rush years, it dates back further than any other Chinese community in North America and, spanning 30 city blocks, it’s also the largest neighborhood of its kind outside Asia. The neighborhood unfolds slowly as you explore its nooks and crannies. Around every corner is something new and wondrous: down one side alley sits Tin How Temple, a quiet, incense-filled space where locals gather to pray; down another sits Golden Gate Fortune Cookie Factory, a small shop where workers rapid-fold fortune cookies beneath a soundtrack of whirring machinery. You’ll see a real cross-section of humanity here—families eating dim sum, older Chinese men playing cards, influencers snapping selfies on Grant Avenue, and tourists hunting for souvenirs (prices are cheaper here than in Union Square and Pier 39).
551 moradores locais recomendam
Chinatown
551 moradores locais recomendam
San Francisco’s Chinatown looms large in our collective imagination, and rightly so. Born during the California Gold Rush years, it dates back further than any other Chinese community in North America and, spanning 30 city blocks, it’s also the largest neighborhood of its kind outside Asia. The neighborhood unfolds slowly as you explore its nooks and crannies. Around every corner is something new and wondrous: down one side alley sits Tin How Temple, a quiet, incense-filled space where locals gather to pray; down another sits Golden Gate Fortune Cookie Factory, a small shop where workers rapid-fold fortune cookies beneath a soundtrack of whirring machinery. You’ll see a real cross-section of humanity here—families eating dim sum, older Chinese men playing cards, influencers snapping selfies on Grant Avenue, and tourists hunting for souvenirs (prices are cheaper here than in Union Square and Pier 39).
This is our favorite neighborhood - it's got everything from cute local shops, to great food to amazing coffee.
223 moradores locais recomendam
Hayes Valley
223 moradores locais recomendam
This is our favorite neighborhood - it's got everything from cute local shops, to great food to amazing coffee.

Sightseeing

Amazing trail with breathtaking views of the golden gate bridge
694 moradores locais recomendam
Trilha Lands End
Lands End Trail
694 moradores locais recomendam
Amazing trail with breathtaking views of the golden gate bridge
The Mission's famous street art, which spills out of alleys, splashes across the exterior of grocery stores and bodegas, and covers homes, is one of its most pronounced characteristics. Some pieces are commissioned, others more spontaneous, but all of it contributes to the neighborhood’s character. The spots you should make sure to hit if you’re touring around are Balmy Alley, just off Mission and 24th Streets, and Clarion Alley near the 16th Street BART station. If you have a bit more time, check out the neighborhood’s major mural corridors, 24th Street from Valencia to Portrero Avenue and Mission Street from the corner of 15th Street to Cesar Chavez. For a real deep dive, contact Precita Eyes Muralists, a nonprofit that runs street art tours of the neighborhood.
355 moradores locais recomendam
Distrito Mission
355 moradores locais recomendam
The Mission's famous street art, which spills out of alleys, splashes across the exterior of grocery stores and bodegas, and covers homes, is one of its most pronounced characteristics. Some pieces are commissioned, others more spontaneous, but all of it contributes to the neighborhood’s character. The spots you should make sure to hit if you’re touring around are Balmy Alley, just off Mission and 24th Streets, and Clarion Alley near the 16th Street BART station. If you have a bit more time, check out the neighborhood’s major mural corridors, 24th Street from Valencia to Portrero Avenue and Mission Street from the corner of 15th Street to Cesar Chavez. For a real deep dive, contact Precita Eyes Muralists, a nonprofit that runs street art tours of the neighborhood.
Golden Gate Park houses some of San Francisco’s most beloved institutions—the Victorian-era glass-ensconced Conservatory of Flowers, the de Young Fine Arts Museum, and the Academy of Sciences, among them—as well as less famous attractions such as the bison paddock, Shakespeare’s Garden and the north and south windmills. On Sundays, the main drive is closed to cars. Bicyclists, rollerskaters, and eager Lindy Hop aficionados take over the streets.
1721 moradores locais recomendam
Parque Golden Gate
1721 moradores locais recomendam
Golden Gate Park houses some of San Francisco’s most beloved institutions—the Victorian-era glass-ensconced Conservatory of Flowers, the de Young Fine Arts Museum, and the Academy of Sciences, among them—as well as less famous attractions such as the bison paddock, Shakespeare’s Garden and the north and south windmills. On Sundays, the main drive is closed to cars. Bicyclists, rollerskaters, and eager Lindy Hop aficionados take over the streets.
The most famous ones—there are hundreds of houses—can be found in NoPa, the Lower Haight, Haight-Ashbury, and Cole Valley neighborhoods. But there’s one row, in particular, so iconic that it’s simply referred to as “the Painted Ladies” (or sometimes “Postcard Row”): the houses of 710-720 Steiner Street at the corner of Hayes Street. These gals have appeared in an estimated 70 movies, ads, and TV shows including, yes, Full House. You can’t enter the Painted Ladies (real people live there), but you can get a great view and a photo of your own from the east-facing hillside of Alamo Square across the street.
300 moradores locais recomendam
Painted Ladies
Hayes Street
300 moradores locais recomendam
The most famous ones—there are hundreds of houses—can be found in NoPa, the Lower Haight, Haight-Ashbury, and Cole Valley neighborhoods. But there’s one row, in particular, so iconic that it’s simply referred to as “the Painted Ladies” (or sometimes “Postcard Row”): the houses of 710-720 Steiner Street at the corner of Hayes Street. These gals have appeared in an estimated 70 movies, ads, and TV shows including, yes, Full House. You can’t enter the Painted Ladies (real people live there), but you can get a great view and a photo of your own from the east-facing hillside of Alamo Square across the street.
It may be miles from the ocean, but sunny Mission Dolores Park might just be the most popular 'beach' in San Francisco. Any weekend above 60 degrees and every green inch of the park is guaranteed to be packed with barbecues, locals lounging on inflatable couches, hula-hoopers, and tightrope walkers. Recently expanded restrooms and an updated playground for little ones make the convergence a little more comfortable. The southwest slope offers the best views of the downtown skyline and a variety of manscaping on what is known as the 'Fruit Shelf'.
1244 moradores locais recomendam
Parque Mission Dolores
19th Street
1244 moradores locais recomendam
It may be miles from the ocean, but sunny Mission Dolores Park might just be the most popular 'beach' in San Francisco. Any weekend above 60 degrees and every green inch of the park is guaranteed to be packed with barbecues, locals lounging on inflatable couches, hula-hoopers, and tightrope walkers. Recently expanded restrooms and an updated playground for little ones make the convergence a little more comfortable. The southwest slope offers the best views of the downtown skyline and a variety of manscaping on what is known as the 'Fruit Shelf'.