- The "Full House" house in San Francisco has sold for $6 million.
- The sitcom's creator, Jeff Franklin, bought and renovated the property before selling it in 2020.
- The home's new owners put it on the market in June of 2024; the sale closed on April 7.
The San Francisco house used as the Tanner residence in the beloved sitcom "Full House" has sold for $6 million.
The early opening credits of the show — which chronicled the hijinks of three men parenting three sisters over eight seasons from 1987 to 1995 — ended with a shot of the Victorian townhouse at 1709 Broderick Street.
In reality, though, the show filmed all of its interior scenes at a studio in Los Angeles. So the memorable living room and kitchen where countless humorous exchanges took place never actually existed inside the house.
That doesn't stop people from showing up and taking pictures.
The "Full House" fandom is still alive — so much so that the show's creator, Jeff Franklin, paid $4 million for the house in 2016 and planned to turn the interior into a replica of the TV set and allow fans to visit.
Those plans fell through and Franklin renovated the home in a more modern fashion. The outside looks the same as it did in the '80s, but the red door has been repainted a more neutral black color. The same can't be said about the inside, which was completely updated with upscale 21st-century finishings and furniture.
Franklin sold the house for $5.35 million in 2020. Those buyers turned sellers who put the home on the market for $6.5 million in June 2024. In April 2025, they sold the four-bedroom, three-and-a-half-bathroom townhouse for $6 million, according to its listing history on Realtor.com. (TMZ first reported the sale.)
Take a look at the "Full House" house, which remains a pop-culture touchpoint even as it's undergone many changes.
The "Full House" home made famous by the sitcom sold in April for $6 million.
Rachel Swann of The Swann Group listed the four-bedroom home, which last sold in 2020 for $5.35 million. Swann didn't immediately return a request for comment from Business Insider.
Jeff Franklin, the show's creator, bought the home in 2016 for $4 million and renovated it before the 2020 sale.
The opening credits of "Full House" actually showed two different neighborhoods.
In the opening credits of the show, the family is seen driving across San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge and picnicking by the famous row of "Painted Ladies" — pastel-colored Victorian townhouses — across from Alamo Square.
The house that the Tanners "lived in" during the show — the one used for exterior shots that sold in April of 2025 — is actually about a mile north of Alamo Square.
Although the red door is missing, the home still looks similar to when it was featured on the show.
The exterior of the home looks slightly updated since the show first aired in 1987, but it retains a neutral-colored facade, a big bay window, brick steps, and a door framed by white columns.
It's still a tourist attraction for many fans of "Full House," and many paid pilgrimages and left flowers after star Bob Saget's sudden death in 2022.
Immediately, the inside takes on a very different vibe than the Tanners' living room.
The inside of the home always looked different than it did on the show because all indoor scenes were filmed using a soundstage.
Franklin's original plan after buying the house was to renovate the 3,737-square-foot home to replicate the set of the show, but those plans fell through.
Unsurprisingly, the kitchen looks way more modern than the woodsy kitchen showed on air.
The house was originally built in 1883, but architect Richard Landry renovated it most recently in 2019.
The bedrooms definitely aren't stuck in the '80s.
With the lack of wallpaper, posters, and other colorful decorations, this couldn't be one of the girls' rooms.
The home retains a few nods to its place in TV history.
In the backyard garden, there are concrete slabs with handprints and signatures from the original cast.