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Painted Ladies

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Painted Ladies, often called Postcard Row, are the iconic Victorian facades on Steiner Street above Alamo Square in San Francisco. Even a short stop gives you the classic skyline frame, vivid architecture, and a quick feel for the Western Addition.

Start with a guided city tour that includes this stop, because you lock in transport and context in one booking while keeping the rest of your day flexible.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Guided Tours

Choose this section if you want commentary, fixed routing, and a reliable Painted Ladies photo stop inside a broader San Francisco itinerary.
Painted Ladies Private San Francisco Tour
5.0(143)
 
viator.com
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Combo Small-Group Tour: SF City plus Muir Woods & Sausalito
4.5(130)
 
viator.com
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4-Hour Painted Ladies and Haight-Ashbury GoCar Tour
4.9(16)
 
viator.com
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More Tickets & Tours

This catches the remaining mapped products, including broader combo formats that add regional stops to a city sightseeing day.
San Francisco city tour and Muir Woods combo
 
musement.com
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6 tips for visiting the Painted Ladies

1
Use late morning for clearer views
If your priority is skyline clarity, aim for late morning or early afternoon at the Alamo Square side of the Painted Ladies. That window usually gives cleaner light and less fog than very early or very late slots. You spend less time waiting for visibility and more time actually shooting.
2
Photograph from public areas
These houses are private residences, so keep your photos to public sidewalks and park edges along Steiner Street, Hayes Street, and Grove Street. If you want close facade detail, use a short lens and stay clear of driveways. That way you get strong shots without creating friction with residents.
3
Use current Muni lines
For the simplest approach, use Muni lines 5, 5R, or 6, then walk up to the viewpoint. Older guides still mention line 21, but that route is no longer in regular service. This avoids a dead-end transfer and keeps your schedule intact.
4
Match the tour style to your day
If you want narration and zero navigation stress, choose a guided small-group or private city tour. If your priority is flexible pacing and short custom stops, a self-drive audio format can work better. Decide this first, so you do not overbook the same neighborhood twice.
5
Keep this stop short and focused
For most first visits, 20 to 45 minutes covers the main viewpoint, facade photos, and one short block walk. Add extra time only if you also want lawn or playground time in Alamo Square. This keeps energy for the rest of your San Francisco day.
6
Pair one nearby anchor
If you want a coherent half-day route, pair this stop with Alamo Square and one more anchor: Coit Tower for another viewpoint, the San Francisco Ferry Building for food and waterfront walking, or Twin Peaks for a higher skyline perch. One clear pairing keeps decisions simple.

How to plan a Painted Ladies stop in a San Francisco day

This stop is short, but timing and approach decide whether it feels smooth or rushed. Set those decisions first, then add one nearby anchor.

Set your photo window before transit

At the Painted Ladies, light and fog can change the full mood of the same viewpoint. If your priority is clean skyline contrast, late morning and early afternoon are often the most reliable windows. Lock your transport around that choice, so you spend more time shooting than waiting.

Approach from the Alamo Square side

Starting on the Alamo Square side gives you the most recognizable framing of Postcard Row and a cleaner flow for a short stop. For lower effort, come from Hayes Street and Scott Street, then move directly to the main lawn edge. This keeps your route compact and your energy steady.

Pair one nearby anchor, not three

Choose one follow-up based on intent: Coit Tower for another viewpoint, the San Francisco Ferry Building for food and waterfront mood, or Twin Peaks for a higher skyline angle. If you stack too many similar stops, the day blurs together. One strong pairing keeps the route memorable.

Adjust pacing by travel style

With family, keep it to a quick photo block and move to open space in Alamo Square. If you travel solo or on a repeat visit, add a longer facade-focused walk through surrounding blocks. If mobility comfort is your priority, keep elevation changes minimal and stay with the shortest route.

History behind the Painted Ladies facades

The row is famous for color and skyline framing, but the deeper story is about survival, naming, and preservation in San Francisco's urban core.

1892 to 1896: Victorian color on Steiner Street

The best-known houses in this row were built between 1892 and 1896, during San Francisco's late Victorian building wave. Their decorative fronts still define the visual identity of this block. What you see today is not random charm, but deliberate period craftsmanship.

1906: survival after the earthquake era

In the 1906 earthquake and fire period, large parts of San Francisco changed dramatically, but this row survived. That survival is one reason the stop feels like a direct visual bridge to the pre-war city. You are looking at architecture that endured where much else was reset.

1978: how the name Painted Ladies spread

The phrase Painted Ladies became widely used after the 1978 book by Elizabeth Pomada and Michael Larsen. Since then, the term has helped turn one street view into a global shorthand for San Francisco's Victorian image. The nickname stuck because it is both vivid and accurate.

1984: district-era preservation context

By 1984, historic-district protection in the wider Alamo Square area reinforced the long-term survival of this streetscape identity. That context helps explain why the facades still read as a coherent set today, not isolated leftovers. Preservation policy became visible in everyday street experience.

Tour formats that include the Painted Ladies

Mapped inventory is guided-tour heavy, with a smaller set of alternative formats. Choose by pace and control, then commit early to avoid duplicate planning.

Guided city tours for low-friction logistics

Best for first-time visitors who want one booking with routing and commentary handled for them. Choose this if your priority is seeing multiple neighborhoods without navigation overhead. You save time and decision fatigue, especially on a packed day. Book now.

Private and small-group formats for flexibility

Great when you want more control over pacing, photo time, and stop emphasis around the Painted Ladies. Choose this if your day has specific priorities, such as architecture angles or family pacing. You get more room to adapt the rhythm on the fly. Book now.

Self-drive audio tours for independent pace

Best for independent travelers who want autonomy and do not need live guiding. Choose this if your priority is customizing stop length and sequence across city highlights. The tradeoff is that you manage timing yourself, but flexibility is higher. Book now.

Combo routes with regional add-ons

Useful if you want a full-day product that mixes a San Francisco city loop with regional legs such as Muir Woods and Sausalito. Choose this when your priority is broad coverage over deep neighborhood time. It is efficient for checklist travelers and tight schedules. Book now.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the Painted Ladies exactly?

They are a famous row of Victorian houses on Steiner Street, opposite Alamo Square, and are often called Postcard Row. The view combines colorful facades with a downtown skyline backdrop.
Read more.

Can I go inside the Painted Ladies?

In normal visitor conditions, no. The buildings are private residences, so visits focus on exterior viewing from public streets and the park side.
Read more.

Do I need an entry ticket?

No admission ticket is required to view the houses from outside. Paid options are city tours that include this stop in a wider itinerary.
Read more.

When is the best time for photos?

Late morning and early afternoon often give cleaner visibility and lighter fog around this viewpoint. If conditions shift, a short buffer in your plan helps you wait for a clearer skyline frame.
Read more.

How much time should I plan here?

A practical first stop is about 20 to 45 minutes. Add more time only if you also want lawn time in Alamo Square or a longer neighborhood walk.
Read more.

Which public transport lines are most useful now?

Most visitors use Muni lines 5, 5R, and 6. If you see old references to line 21, treat them as outdated and route with current maps.
Read more.

Where is the classic viewpoint?

The iconic angle is from the Alamo Square side, looking toward the row on Steiner Street between Hayes Street and Grove Street. Arriving from the park side usually gives the cleanest framing.
Read more.

What can I pair with this stop nearby?

A practical sequence is Alamo Square plus one extra anchor: Coit Tower, the San Francisco Ferry Building, or Twin Peaks. This keeps your route focused instead of fragmented.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

The Painted Ladies are private homes, so there are no interior opening hours for visitors. For the main Alamo Square Park viewpoint, park hours are 5:00 am to 12 midnight. Restrooms are open 8:00 am to 8:00 pm in spring/summer and 8:00 am to 5:30 pm in fall/winter.

tickets

No admission ticket is required to view the Painted Ladies from public streets or the Alamo Square Park side. The houses are private residences, so there is no official interior ticket or standalone Painted Ladies booking; paid city tours are optional products that may include a photo stop.

address

Painted Ladies / Postcard Row
Steiner Street (between Hayes Street and Grove Street)
San Francisco, CA 94117
United States

how to get there

Most visitors use Muni lines 5, 5R, or 6, then walk a few minutes to the park-side viewpoint on Steiner Street. Rideshare drop-offs are easiest near Hayes Street and Scott Street to avoid extra loops around the hill. In late afternoon, leave buffer time for city traffic.

accessibility

For a smoother low-slope approach, enter from the southeast side of Alamo Square Park at Hayes Street and Scott Street, then continue to the main viewpoint. Surface and incline conditions vary by block, so a compact route usually works best. This is generally the easiest option for wheelchairs, strollers, and visitors who want lower effort.

photography and filming

Street and park photography is common here, but the facades belong to private homes. Keep tripods and bags clear of sidewalks, avoid blocking driveways, and use drones only with explicit local authorization. A respectful setup keeps your shoot smooth and short.
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