San Francisco: A guide to short-term rentals
San Francisco sparkles: from the beautiful hilltops, down along the bustling waterfront, to its world famous Golden Gate Bridge. Kasa's short-term rentals get you close to all of it.
Kasa's short-term rentals in San Francisco
Our centrally-located short-term rentals and hotel rooms make all of San Francisco's treasures accessible--without paying the city's typically steep rates.
Kasa's short-term rentals in San Francisco
- 4.39 Total rating: 4.39 based on 1166 reviews.
Hotel
Kasa La Monarca San Francisco
- City center
- Community room
- Pets allowed
In the heart of downtown San Francisco, La Monarca is a Kasa Living™ original within walking distance of Union Square, Market Street, and Chinatown....
See availability - 4.39 Total rating: 4.39 based on 1166 reviews.
Hotel
Kasa La Monarca Residential San Francisco
- City center
- Community room
- Pets allowed
In the heart of downtown San Francisco, La Monarca is a Kasa original within walking distance of Union Square, Market Street, and Chinatown. Built in...
See availability - 4.58 Total rating: 4.58 based on 430 reviews.
Apartment
Kasa The Addison San Francisco
- City center
- Kitchenette
- Washer/dryer
Have an unforgettable experience living like a local at our Kasa. Our Pacific Heights property offers amenities such as a kitchenette, stovetop, and...
See availability - 4.33 Total rating: 4.33 based on 377 reviews.
Hotel
The Hotel Castro San Francisco
- City center
- AC
- Hotel-style
For a truly unforgettable experience in San Francisco's iconic Castro District, there's no better place to stay than The Hotel Castro. Thoughtfully...
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Discover San Francisco
After booking your short-term rental in San Francisco, here's everything you need to know for your trip.
San Francisco is a sprawling city, covering almost 50 square miles, and even at that size, is still the second most densely populated city in the United States, only behind New York. It is located about a third of the way down California’s coast, on the San Francisco Peninsula, which separates the San Francisco Bay from the Pacific Ocean. Its surrounding cities and suburbs—including Berkeley, and Oakland across the Bay, Marin County to the north, and San Jose to the south—collectively make up the San Francisco Bay Area, also just called the “Bay Area” for short.
Originally founded by Spanish colonists in 1776, the small, largely uninhabitable town of San Francisco came briefly under Mexican control, and at the end of the Mexican-American war in 1848, was officially established as part of the U.S. In 1849, the California Gold Rush marked the beginning of San Francisco’s first real wave of citizens, expanding the population 20-fold in just one year. 1850 brought California its statehood, and the appeal of wealth buried in the mountains, as well as the Pacific Railroad’s completion in 1869, brought even more Americans out to San Francisco and the west coast. An influx of Chinese immigrants also settled in San Francisco in the mid-1800s, creating the country’s first Chinatown neighborhood; today it is home to the largest population of Chinese people outside of Asia.
San Francisco—also known by Frisco, S.F., and San Fran-—is famous for its hilly streets covered in colorful Victorian homes, many of which were originally constructed during this period of wealth in the late 1800s. In 1906, however, a massive earthquake struck the city, destroying 75% of the young city’s buildings and killing more than 3,000 people. It remains the deadliest natural disaster in California’s history. It was during the decades following this disaster, as San Francisco was forced to rebuild, that the city as we know it today began to take shape. Reservoirs and aqueducts gave the city vital water infrastructure, tunnels, railways, and bridges allowed for ease of transportation, and one of those structures, completed in 1937, went on to become one of the most recognizable architectural achievements in the world-—the Golden Gate Bridge. Around this time, Alcatraz Island, formerly a military fort, became a maximum security federal prison, housing such infamous criminals as Al Capone and George “Machine Gun” Kelly.
Beginning in the 1950s, San Francisco became a hub for the American counterculture. Beat Generation writers, hippies, and hundreds of LGBTQ people called the city home, and it became a critical center for the gay liberation movement of the 1970s and beyond. In the late 1990s, the dot-com boom (and later the social media boom) brought a wave of technology and information start-ups to the San Francisco Bay area, giving rise to the region known as Silicon Valley, which is still host to giant technology companies like Apple, Google, and Facebook. The tech industry dominates the Bay Area today, as well as banking institutions and renowned educational institutions. Stunning coastlines, forests, hiking trails, beaches, and parks surround the city, making it a playground for outdoor-lovers who use grab a short-term rental in the city as their home base.
If you’re flying into San Francisco, you’re probably flying into San Francisco International Airport (SFO), located just 13 miles south of the city. Other nearby airports include Oakland International Airport (OAK), about 10 miles northeast of the city across the San Francisco Bay, and San Jose International Airport (SJC), which is about an hour south of the city. All three airports have affordable public transportation options to and from the city. You can take the BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit) to and from SFO and OAK, and you can take the Caltrain commuter rail line from SJC.
In the city itself, there is the Muni, a wide network of buses, trains, and cable cars to help you navigate the city from the steps of your short-term rental. There are also three cable car lines, and one historic streetcar line called the F-Line, which runs up Market Street to Fisherman’s Wharf. The Munimobile app allows you to purchase fares for all of these transportation options with your smartphone. You can also buy a Clipper Card at many Muni stations, which provides access to all transport options as well. Rideshares and taxis are also available throughout the city, as well as daily or hourly bike rentals.
San Francisco is an enormous city with endless activities and landmarks to see. You can easily spend a week or more and still not take in all the city has to offer. But there are some highlights you shouldn’t miss.
No trip to S.F. would be complete without a visit to the Golden Gate Bridge. Spanning the one-mile length of the strait connecting the San Francisco Bay with the Pacific Ocean, the vermillion-hued suspension bridge is a sight to behold. Parking is limited at either end of the bridge, so if you want to visit the bridge itself, it’s best to find an alternate method of transportation. But there are plenty of places throughout the city where you can get an optimal view of the architectural marvel without having to deal with crowds. Marshall’s Beach sits just south of the bridge and offers one of the city’s most breathtaking views.
On the northeast side of the city is Fisherman’s Wharf, one of the city’s most popular tourist destinations. There’s plenty to do here: Scope out the sea lions sunning along Pier 39, grab a bowl of chowder in a classic sourdough bread bowl from one of the many restaurants, watch the boats in the Maritime National Historic Park, or wander the shops in Ghirardelli Square, named for the Italian chocolatier who created his namesake chocolate brand in San Francisco in the mid-1800s. The hands-on Exploratorium museum is also here, a great spot for kids and curious adults alike.
Visit Golden Gate Park, one of the world’s biggest urban green spaces. More than one thousand acres are open to exploration, filled with trails, picnic spots, museums, and gardens. While you’re here, visit the California Academy of Sciences, which includes a planetarium, aquarium, and natural history museum, as well as the de Young Museum, which features an impressive collection of American sculpture and paintings. You’ll also find the 55-acre San Francisco Botanical Garden here, as well as the Conservatory of Flowers, an exquisite Victorian-style greenhouse filled with lush aquatic and tropical plants.
Art lovers can’t miss the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMoMA), the first modern art museum on the west coast. More than 32,000 modern artworks and installations are on display here, including pieces from artists such as Richard Serra, Gerhard Richter, Andy Warhold, and Alexander Calder. Spend some time in the sculpture garden, or scope out the view from the oculus bridge on the museum’s 5th floor.
A mile and a half off the San Francisco coastline, Alcatraz Island was originally home to the first lighthouse on the west coast. After a few decades as a federal penitentiary housing some of the country’s most dangerous criminals, it is now a part of the state’s Golden Gate National Recreation Area. Book a bay cruise that will bring you on a tour around the island, and explore the defunct prison on the island itself.
As an extremely hilly city, San Francisco is full of staircases, and the 16th Avenue Moraga Mosaic Steps is perhaps the most unique. The 163 steps are located on 16th Avenue in between Noreiga and Moraga streets in the city’s Sunset neighborhood, discreetly tucked away from the city’s more popular attractions. The fronts of the steps are arranged with tiles handmade by a handful of local artists over the course of nearly 3 years. It features more than 2,000 tiles made from more than 75,000 ceramic fragments, which swirl their way up the hillside.
San Francisco’s Chinatown neighborhood is the country’s oldest and largest, and as such features dozens of wonderful restaurants. There are actually two main streets that make up this neighborhood, Grant and Stockton. It’s on Stockton you should seek out stellar dim sum, or have a stately meal at one of the vast Chinese banquet halls. When you’re done, hop over to Ross Alley and visit the massive Golden Gate Fortune Cookie Company for a treat to take home.
The city is famous for its crusty, tangy sourdough bread, which dates all the way back to the first pioneers who made their homes out west. It uses only natural fermentation to create its soft, hole-riddled interior and slightly sour flavor. The historic Boudin Bakery, which opened in 1849 and pioneered a lasting trend in the city, is still in operation today, but you can also find bakeries all across the city to grab a loaf and take it on the road with you.
While you’re in San Francisco, don’t miss out on the opportunity to try an It’s-It, one of the city’s most famous ice cream confections—and one that rarely finds its way outside of California. Originally made as an amusement park treat in the early 1900s, the ice cream sandwiches, which feature two chocolate-dipped oatmeal cookies and a variety of ice cream flavors, are a summertime favorite.
The city has thousands of restaurants, more per capita than any other major city in the country, and many of them renowned world-wide for their unique cuisine. Check out neighborhoods like Tenderloin, the Mission District, and Hayes Valley for some of the city’s trendiest spots. If you’re a true food-lover, check out the San Francisco Farmers’ Market, located in the Ferry Building on Tuesday and Saturday mornings, where many of the city’s best chefs go each week for the best local produce.
The Mission District is one of San Francisco’s trendiest areas, filled with the city’s vibrant arts and culture scene. Here you’ll find an endless array of hip shops, stylish boutiques, art galleries, and one-of-a-kind restaurants. Take a stroll down Valencia and let your eye wander along all colorful shop fronts and classic California characters.
The Union Square neighborhood is the go-to destination for luxury shopping experiences. You’ll find all the most recognizable fashion brands represented here, not to mention a few local favorites. There are plenty of restaurants too, for recharging your batteries in between boutiques. Every November you can witness the Macy’s Great Tree Lighting Ceremony, as well as tour the outdoor holiday market to wrap up all your holiday shopping.
If you’re looking more for tiny boutiques and home goods shops, head to Hayes Valley, just a quick walk from the San Francisco Ballet and the San Francisco Opera House. You’ll find everything from designer throws and home decor to sustainable clothing and handmade ceramic tableware.
San Francisco and its surrounding Bay Area is home to some of California’s most beautiful parks and trails. Within the city, spend an afternoon hiking around The Presidio, a former military fort turned national park that exists entirely within the city’s borders. Play a round of golf at the Presidio Golf Course, catch an overlook of the Golden Gate Bridge from Crissy Field, or take a hike along any of the park’s 24 miles of meandering trails. If the beach is your scene, Baker Beach and Marshall’s Beach are two of the city’s best, running right up the coast to the base of the Golden Gate Bridge. The north end of these beaches is “clothing optional,” so be prepared to come across a few nude sunbathers.
Take a walking tour of San Francisco’s Painted Ladies, a stunning “postcard row” of some of the city’s most picturesque Victorian homes. Start at the corner of Hayes and Steiner streets in Alamo Square for the best view, and meander through the steep, narrow streets to see all the most beautiful Queen Anne–style houses the neighborhood has to offer, all with the city’s sprawling skyline as a backdrop. Bring a picnic lunch and relax on the lawn at Alamo Square Park while you’re there.
While it might require an hour’s drive north of the city, visitors to San Francisco will definitely want to make the trek up to Muir Woods. The legendary old-growth redwood forests have been preserved as a national monument since 1908 and feature some of the biggest trees on the planet, some rising higher than 300 feet and extending more than 12 feet wide. The park has become quite popular, so parking spots must be reserved in advance, or you can take a shuttle from the city to spend the day wandering the raised trails and hanging out among the trees.
After an afternoon shopping and eating your way across the Mission, spend an afternoon hanging out in Dolores Park, a beloved hilly spot to relax, people-watch, and soak up the sun. The views of the city from the top of the hill are totally postcard-worthy, and occasionally the park offers outdoor movie nights, so grab a picnic dinner and a blanket and keep your eyes peeled for the latest showings.
Take a hike at one of the myriad hiking trails in the surrounding Bay Area. Serious hikers can take the 13-mile round-trip trail to Alamere Falls at Point Reyes National Seashore, or for something challenging still but more moderate, take the six-mile journey to the top of Mission Peak in the South Bay. If the beach is your preferred scene, try the trails at Mussel Rock Park Nature Preserve in Daly City, which features an endless-seeming coastline jutting up against towering rocky cliffs.
One of the country’s first and most famous LGBTQ-focused neighborhoods, The Castro became a gay mecca in the 1960s. Famous activist Harvey Milk resided there before his assassintation, and the camera store he used to own is still there on Castro Street, in the form of a set built in 2011 for the biopic Milk.
You can thank San Francisco resident Levi Strauss for your favorite pair of jeans. Strauss was a German textile trader who headed west during the Gold Rush, and with one of his customers, Jacob Davis, invented a pair of sturdy indigo-dyed denim work pants with copper rivets. And thus, blue jeans were born.
A good portion of San Francisco today was built on top of the remnants of shipwrecks dating back to the California Gold Rush. Gold-hungry prospectors came from all over the world to get a taste of what the mines had to offer, parking their boats in a part of the city that was once a shallow cove. But in the chaos of the time, some boats were abandoned and deteriorated, and now dozens of shipwrecks lie beneath the eastern part of San Francisco.
The Golden Gate Bridge wasn’t intended to be orange. The orange paint, called “International Orange,” was actually a primer, meant to protect the steel for the bridge while it was in transit. The United States Navy wanted to paint it blue and yellow, but consulting architect Irving Morrow loved the accidental color so much he decided to keep it.