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A San Francisco House That Was Totally Gutted By Fire Is on the Market for $800,000

San Francisco’s housing market seemed to go mad years ago.

First there was an old FedEx truck without plumbing that went for $600 a month. Then there was the $900 a month tent in someone’s backyard and a guy who paid $400 a month for a literal box in the living room of his friend’s apartment.

Two years ago, the cheapest home on the market in San Francisco was a “worn-down, decomposing wooden shack that was built in 1906” that was selling for $350,000.

And last year, a billboard cropped up advertising new homes “from the low $1,000,000s.”

But in the most depressing sign that the housing market insanity in San Francisco is nowhere near slowing, now you can buy a one bed/one bath home that’s literally burned out for $800,000.

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Read: An Exclusive San Francisco Neighborhood Owed Taxes. So a Couple Bought The Street for $90,000

The Bernal Heights house was gutted in a fire last year, meaning that whoever buys the property will need to demolish and rebuild. But that’s not all—apparently the realtor considers the $800,000 price tag to be low, Business Insider reports, and expects it will sell for more than asking price.

The interior of a Bernal Heights home that was gutted by a 2016 fire.
The interior of a Bernal Heights home that was gutted by a 2016 fire.

Real estate database company Zillow reports that the median home price in San Francisco is $1,234,800, with home values going up 10.7% over the past year. Zillow estimates that prices will continue to rise 2.9% within the next year.

But according to the California Association of Realtors’ Housing Affordability Index, the growing median price means that only 12% of San Francisco households could afford to purchase a median-priced home by the end of Q2 this year.

With those bleak numbers, it looks like the buyer of this charred house might be considered very lucky indeed.