Been dreaming of owning the Tanner’s house from Full House since Michelle was a toddler? You got it, dude—if you’ve got $6.5 million to spend.
The iconic Victorian that was shown in exterior shots of the ABC show (and its Netflix sequel), located at 1709 Broderick Street in San Francisco, went on the market this week. It was last sold in 2020 for $5.35 million.
The house measures about 3,700 square feet on the inside and comes with four bedrooms, three-and-a-half bathrooms, a gas fireplace, a two-car garage, and an English garden. There’s a walk-in pantry in the chef’s kitchen, which is equipped with a wine fridge and Viking appliances. And the lower floor houses a wet bar.
Throughout that English garden are concrete stones that feature the handprints and signatures of the Full House cast. Whoever buys the house will have the option to buy those as well, though the price was not mentioned.
The home was built in 1900 originally and renovated most recently by architect Richard Landry, AIA, and the Landry Design Group. It was previously owned by Full House creator Jeff Franklin.
“It’s great to have the house in our Full House family and be able to preserve it for the fans,” he told The Hollywood Reporter at the time. “Seriously, I love owning this house.”
Full House ran on ABC from 1987 through 1995. The sequel, Fuller House, aired five seasons on Netflix. While the home’s exterior is iconic, the show was largely filmed on a soundstage in Los Angeles, about 375 miles away.
That’s little relief for neighbors, who have long dealt with tourists and fans posing in front of the home and sometimes blasting the sitcom’s theme song. Even Franklin, when he owned it, estimated that some 250 fans showed up daily to take pictures in front of the house.
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Chris Morris