San Diego Real Estate Investment Guide For 2026
A comprehensive resource for investors targeting California’s most diversified coastal market, where military stability, world-class biotech, international border economics, and one of the nation’s most desirable climates create year-round rental demand that has never softened
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In This Guide
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1. San Diego Market Overview
Market Fundamentals
San Diego is California’s most economically diversified major city and the state’s most underrated investment market. Where Los Angeles depends on entertainment and San Francisco on technology, San Diego’s economy rests on a tripod of military and defense, biotech and life sciences, and tourism, with the added dimension of the world’s busiest land border crossing with Tijuana adding a fourth economic anchor. This diversification means San Diego avoided SF’s post-pandemic technology correction, LA’s entertainment industry volatility, and virtually every market-specific shock that has periodically disrupted California’s other major metros.
Key economic indicators defining the San Diego investment case:
- Population: 1.44M city, 3.3M San Diego County
- Major Employers: U.S. Navy, Marine Corps, UCSD, Qualcomm, Illumina, General Atomics, SAIC, Leidos, Kaiser Permanente, Dexcom
- Military Presence: 100,000+ active duty personnel; largest military concentration in the world by installation count
- Biotech Cluster: 600+ life science companies, 70,000+ biotech jobs, third-largest biotech hub in the nation
- Median Household Income: $91,000 citywide; $120,000+ in biotech and defense corridors
- Vacancy Rate: 3.8% overall; under 2% near military bases
San Diego is also California’s most landlord-friendly major city for investment purposes. No local rent control ordinance exists, AB 1482 applies at the state level with its more moderate protections, and the military tenant base provides a government-backed BAH rental floor that has remained consistent through every economic cycle since World War II.
San Diego’s military, biotech, and tourism economy creates the most diversified investment case of any major California city
2026 Economic Outlook
- Navy and Marine Corps expanding San Diego presence with new deployments and facility upgrades
- Biotech sector adding 8,000+ jobs annually as UCSD research pipeline produces new company formations
- Cross-border Tijuana economy growing with new maquiladora investment and medical tourism
- UCSD campus expansion adding student and research employee housing demand
- Mid-Coast Trolley extension connecting UC San Diego to downtown improving transit-oriented investment
- San Diego International Airport expansion accommodating 30M+ annual passengers by 2028
Why San Diego Outperforms Most California Markets on Risk-Adjusted Returns
| Metric | San Diego | Los Angeles | San Francisco |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $825,000 | $875,000 | $1,350,000 |
| Cap Rate | 4.0-5.5% | 3.5-5.0% | 2.5-4.0% |
| Local Rent Control | None (AB 1482 only) | RSO + AB 1482 | SF Rent Ordinance + AB 1482 |
| Max Annual Rent Increase | 5% + CPI (max 10%) | 3-4% (RSO buildings) | 60% of CPI (~1.7%) |
| Military Demand Anchor | Extremely strong (world’s largest) | Moderate | Minimal |
| Regulatory Complexity | Moderate (state law only) | Very High | Extreme |
| Economic Diversification | Military, biotech, tourism, border | Entertainment, tech, logistics | Technology dominant |
Historical Performance
| Period | Market Driver | Avg Annual Appreciation | Key Event |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2010-2014 | Post-recession recovery, military stability | 5-8% | SD outperforms most California markets; military BAH floor prevents sharp correction |
| 2015-2019 | Biotech boom, North Park gentrification, tech arrival | 7-11% | North Park transforms from working-class to premium; Barrio Logan begins gentrification |
| 2020-2022 | Pandemic demand, remote work lifestyle migration | 14-22% | SD experiences one of nation’s strongest pandemic appreciation cycles; inventory hits record lows |
| 2023-2024 | Rate normalization; market stable | 4-6% | SD market holds better than LA and SF; military demand floor prevents significant correction |
| 2025-2026 | Rate stabilization, biotech expansion, airport growth | 6-9% (projected) | Mid-Coast Trolley opens; Barrio Logan and Southeastern SD gentrification accelerates |
The Military BAH Investment Advantage
No discussion of San Diego real estate investment is complete without understanding Basic Allowance for Housing (BAH). BAH is a non-taxable monthly housing allowance paid to military service members when they do not live in government housing. San Diego BAH rates in 2026:
- E-5 with dependents: Approximately $3,200 to $3,500 per month
- E-7 with dependents: Approximately $3,600 to $3,900 per month
- O-3 with dependents: Approximately $4,200 to $4,600 per month
- O-5 with dependents: Approximately $4,800 to $5,200 per month
BAH is set to cover local rental market rates; when rents rise, BAH rises with them on an annual cycle. Military tenants pay their rent directly from their BAH and are generally among the most reliable renters in any market because failure to pay rent can result in disciplinary action and loss of the BAH allowance. Properties priced within BAH range near military installations have virtually 0 percent vacancy during periods when orders cycle service members through San Diego.
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2. Neighborhood Hotspots
San Diego Investment Neighborhood Map
Interactive map of San Diego’s key investment neighborhoods. Green stars show top hotspots, blue circles mark established markets, and orange circles highlight emerging areas.
Core Investment Neighborhoods
Detailed Submarket Analysis: All San Diego Neighborhoods
| Neighborhood | Price Range (SFH) | Cap Rate | Growth Drivers | Best Strategy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| La Jolla | $1.5M-$8M+ | 2.5-3.8% | UCSD, ocean views, global buyers, Scripps | Trophy hold, appreciation, UCSD professional tenants |
| Carmel Valley / Del Mar | $1.1M-$2.2M | 3.8-4.8% | Biotech cluster, schools, luxury family demand | Biotech professional tenants, stable appreciation |
| Mission Hills / Hillcrest | $850K-$1.6M | 3.8-4.8% | Balboa Park, walkability, established professional demand | Long-term hold, Craftsman renovation, appreciation |
| North Park / South Park | $780K-$1.2M | 4.0-5.5% | Walkability, craft beer, creative professionals, best value-add | Value-add renovation, ADU, appreciation hold |
| Pacific Beach / Mission Beach | $850K-$1.8M | 4.5-8.5% (STR) | Ocean/bay access, tourism, young professionals | STR primary, year-round beach tourism |
| Kearny Mesa / Miramar | $680K-$980K | 4.5-6.0% | MCAS Miramar, military BAH, defense contractors | Military BAH targeting, near-zero vacancy |
| Barrio Logan / Logan Heights | $620K-$950K | 4.5-6.5% | Gentrification, bay proximity, art district, North Park overflow | Early appreciation play, value-add, 7-10 year hold |
| Point Loma / Ocean Beach | $900K-$1.8M | 3.8-5.0% | Military demand, bay views, peninsula constraints | Military targeting, long-term hold |
| Normal Heights / City Heights | $620K-$900K | 4.8-6.2% | North Park spillover, Trolley access, value-add | Value-add, cash flow, gentrification play |
| Chula Vista / National City | $550K-$850K | 5.0-7.0% | Military BAH, border economy, bayfront development | Best SD cash flow, military targeting, workforce housing |
| Southeastern SD (Encanto) | $550K-$800K | 5.5-7.5% | Most affordable city entry, Trolley access, long runway | Highest cap rate in SD, patient appreciation play |
| East Village / Downtown | $450K-$950K | 4.5-6.0% | Petco Park, Gaslamp, urban lifestyle, transit hub | Condo hold, urban lifestyle tenants, STR potential |
Expert Insight: “Barrio Logan is to San Diego in 2026 what North Park was in 2010. The art district, the bayfront, Chicano Park as a national monument, and the Naval Station San Diego proximity are all there. The only thing that has been missing is market recognition, and that is changing rapidly. I am telling every client who asks about value-add in San Diego to look at Barrio Logan first. The entry prices still reflect the neighborhood’s past, not its future. By 2032, Barrio Logan will be in the same conversation as South Park and North Park.” – Carlos Rivera, Principal, San Diego Urban Investment Group
3. Property Types
| Investment Goal | Best Property Type | Best Neighborhoods | Minimum Capital |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zero Vacancy / Military Strategy | SFH priced at BAH rate near installations | Kearny Mesa, Miramar, Chula Vista | $162,500+ |
| Best Appreciation | Value-add Craftsman in gentrifying corridor | Barrio Logan, North Park, South Park | $155,000+ |
| Best STR Revenue | Beach property near ocean or bay | Pacific Beach, Mission Beach, Ocean Beach | $225,000+ |
| Best Cash Flow | South Bay workforce or military rental | Chula Vista, National City, Southeastern SD | $140,000+ |
Don’t guess the costs. Our Complete Renovation & Remodeling Cost Guide covers 400+ pages of project-by-project breakdowns with real contractor pricing ranges.
4. Cost Analysis
Acquisition Cost Breakdown (San Diego)
| Expense Item | Typical Cost | Example ($825,000 Property) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Down Payment | 25% (investment) | $206,250 | Many SD properties require jumbo loans above $806,500 conforming limit |
| Closing Costs | 2-3% of price | $16,500-$24,750 | California escrow, title, lender fees; San Diego County transfer tax $1.10 per $1,000 |
| General Inspection | $450-$700 | $550 | Check for clay soil issues in canyon-adjacent properties; termite inspection separate in SD |
| Termite Inspection and Treatment | $150-$300 + treatment | $400 | SD’s climate makes termites common; separate from general inspection; treatment $2,000-$5,000 if needed |
| Geological / Slope Hazard Report | $500-$2,000 | $750 | Required or strongly recommended for canyon-rim properties; landslide risk in some SD hillside areas |
| Initial Repairs / Make Ready | 0-10% of price | $0-$82,500 | Value-add properties typically $50K-$150K; turnkey military-priced properties minimal |
| Reserves (6 months) | 6 months expenses | $15,000-$22,000 | Lower than LA or SF given stronger cash flow characteristics in SD |
| TOTAL MINIMUM ENTRY (turnkey) | ~29-34% of value | $239,450-$336,250 | Lower than SF; competitive with LA at similar entry price points |
Sample Cash Flow Analysis: North Park SFH + ADU (Best Value-Add SD Strategy)
| Item | Monthly | Annual | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Main House Rent (3BR renovated) | $3,600 | $43,200 | North Park, fully renovated Craftsman, creative professional tenant |
| ADU Rent (detached 1BR) | $1,850 | $22,200 | New detached ADU, $210K build cost, not subject to AB 1482 for first 15 years |
| Gross Income | $5,450 | $65,400 | |
| Less Vacancy (4%) | -$218 | -$2,616 | North Park vacancy typically under 3% |
| Property Taxes | -$875 | -$10,500 | 1.25% effective rate on $840K total assessed (purchase + ADU) |
| Insurance | -$175 | -$2,100 | Landlord policy; lower than coastal properties |
| Property Management (9%) | -$491 | -$5,886 | Recommended; AB 1482 compliance requires professional management knowledge |
| Maintenance + CapEx (8%) | -$436 | -$5,232 | Post-renovation Craftsman with new ADU; lower than pre-renovation |
| Net Operating Income | $3,255 | $39,066 | Before mortgage; cap rate 4.65% on total cost |
| Mortgage ($840K total cost, 25% down, 6.875%, 30yr) | -$4,147 | -$49,764 | Jumbo investment loan; P&I only |
| CASH FLOW | -$892 | -$10,698 | Significantly better than LA equivalent; without ADU: -$2,300/month |
| Cap Rate (total investment) | 4.65% | Significantly better than LA (3.6%) or SF (1.9%) | |
| Total Return (8.5% appreciation) | ~28% | Including equity, appreciation, principal paydown on ~$250K invested |
This example illustrates why San Diego delivers the best risk-adjusted returns among California’s three major investment metros. The cap rate of 4.65 percent is nearly double SF’s comparable calculation and meaningfully better than LA. The negative carry of $892 per month is dramatically lower than the equivalent LA or SF position. California’s AB 1482 (not the stricter SF Rent Ordinance or LA RSO) applies, allowing annual increases of 5 percent plus CPI, and the ADU carries no rent control for its first 15 years.
Expert Insight: “San Diego consistently makes sense in a way that LA and SF do not for the average investor. The military BAH floor means you always have a qualified tenant pool. No local rent control means you operate under the state’s more moderate AB 1482 rules. The ADU program is one of California’s most streamlined. And the city’s economic diversification means it has never experienced the severity of correction that SF went through post-pandemic. For investors who want California appreciation without California regulatory complexity, San Diego is the answer.” – Jennifer Torres, Managing Director, San Diego Capital Real Estate
5. Legal Framework
✅ San Diego’s Regulatory Advantage: California’s Most Landlord-Friendly Major City
San Diego does not have a local rent control ordinance. The city has repeatedly rejected rent control ballot measures. This means investors operate under California’s statewide AB 1482 framework only, which is significantly more landlord-friendly than the RSO system in Los Angeles or the SF Rent Ordinance. AB 1482’s annual cap of 5 percent plus CPI (maximum 10 percent) and 12-month threshold before just cause eviction applies create a straightforward and predictable operating environment. Combined with San Diego’s strong demand fundamentals, this makes SD the most operationally accessible major California investment market.
California AB 1482 (Applies in San Diego)
- Annual Rent Increases: Capped at 5% plus local CPI, with a hard maximum of 10%. No separate CPI calculation required; the formula is straightforward. This cap is significantly more generous than SF’s 60% of CPI (~1.7%) or LA’s RSO (3-4%).
- Just Cause Eviction: Required after 12 months of continuous tenancy. Before 12 months, standard 30 or 60-day notices apply without just cause. This 12-month threshold is an investor-friendly feature that gives San Diego landlords a trial period with new tenants that SF and LA’s more tenant-protective systems do not provide.
- New Construction Exemption: Buildings with certificates of occupancy issued in the last 15 years are fully exempt from AB 1482. All new ADUs are also exempt for 15 years from their CO date.
- Single-Family and Condo Exemption: Single-family homes and individually sold condos are generally exempt from AB 1482 if the owner provides proper written notice to tenants. This exemption is important to structure correctly.
- Security Deposits: California law limits security deposits to 2 months rent (1 month for furnished). Must be returned within 21 days of move-out with itemized accounting.
- Habitability Standards: Standard California habitability requirements apply; heat, plumbing, electrical, weatherproofing.
San Diego-Specific Regulations
- Short-Term Rental Permit Program: San Diego launched a comprehensive STR regulatory framework in 2023. Investors must understand the four tiers before acquiring any property for STR purposes. Tier 2 (part-time, up to 90 nights/year) and Tier 3 (unlimited, primary residence) are the most relevant for investors. Non-primary residence investment properties face the strictest limitations. Permits are limited by tier and geography.
- Mission Beach STR (Tier 4): Mission Beach has its own STR tier with specific rules given the neighborhood’s historically high concentration of vacation rentals. Verify current permit availability before any Mission Beach STR acquisition.
- San Diego ADU Program: SD has one of California’s most developer-friendly ADU programs. Pre-approved plan sets are available, permit review is streamlined, and the city actively supports ADU development as a housing supply solution. Typical permit timeline is 60 to 120 days versus 6 to 18 months in SF.
- Coastal Zone Regulations: Properties within the San Diego Coastal Zone (generally within 1 mile of the coastline) are subject to additional California Coastal Commission review for major improvements and changes of use. Verify coastal zone status before any significant renovation planned for a coastal property.
- Canyon and Geological Hazard Areas: San Diego has significant canyon rim and geological hazard areas. Properties adjacent to canyons may face building restrictions and require geological reports for improvements.
Key Resources
- San Diego STR Permits: sandiego.gov/str
- San Diego ADU Program: sandiego.gov/adu
- California Coastal Commission: coastal.ca.gov
- San Diego Rental Housing Association: sdrha.org
| Property Type | Rent Control Status | Max Annual Increase | Just Cause Eviction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Multi-family, 15+ years old | AB 1482 applies | 5% + CPI (max 10%) | After 12 months |
| New construction (under 15 years) | Exempt from AB 1482 | No cap during exemption | Standard tenant protections only |
| Single-family home (with proper notice) | Exempt from AB 1482 (with notice) | No cap | Standard 30/60-day notice rules |
| Condo (individually owned) | Exempt from AB 1482 (with notice) | No cap (with proper exemption notice) | Standard 30/60-day notice rules |
| New ADU (any property age) | Exempt from AB 1482 for 15 years from CO | No cap during exemption period | Standard protections during exemption |
6. Step-by-Step San Diego Investment Playbook
Define Your San Diego Strategy
Military BAH Zero-Vacancy Strategy
Buy properties priced at BAH rate for E-5 to O-3 within reasonable distance of major installations. Price your rent at or just below the current BAH rate for your target rank. You will never have a vacancy during peak military assignment cycles.
North Park Value-Add + ADU
Buy a dated Craftsman or Spanish Revival bungalow in North Park, South Park, or Normal Heights. Renovate the main house and add an ADU. Best combination of appreciation, yield improvement, and relatively accessible entry prices in San Diego proper.
Barrio Logan Early Appreciation Play
Buy in Barrio Logan or Logan Heights at current prices that still reflect the neighborhood’s past rather than its future. Accept current modest negative carry in exchange for the strongest appreciation trajectory in San Diego over the 7 to 10 year horizon.
Coastal STR Play (Pacific Beach)
Buy a permittable STR property in Pacific Beach or Mission Beach. Target the Tier 3 primary residence permit pathway. A well-managed beachside 3BR at current prices can gross $85,000 to $120,000 annually with strong appreciation on an ocean-adjacent asset.
Build Your San Diego Team
- San Diego Investment Agent: Must have specific experience with military BAH pricing strategies if you are targeting that market. Should understand AB 1482 exemptions for SFH and condos, San Diego ADU permitting, and STR tier requirements. Ask how many military-adjacent investment transactions they have handled.
- California Landlord-Tenant Attorney: AB 1482 compliance, proper exemption notices for SFH and condos, and eviction process expertise. San Diego has an active and experienced landlord attorney community given the military tenant base.
- San Diego Property Manager: Should understand AB 1482 annual increase procedures, military tenant protocols (including SCRA servicemember lease termination rights), and SD’s STR permit requirements. The San Diego Rental Housing Association (SDRHA) maintains a referral directory.
- SD ADU-Experienced Contractor: For the value-add and ADU strategy, find a contractor with specific San Diego city permit experience. SD’s ADU program is streamlined but still requires permit knowledge, particularly for garage conversions and detached structures.
- California CPA with San Diego Experience: Military tenants may invoke Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) provisions; a CPA who understands both California and federal military-landlord tax implications is an advantage.
Military Landlord Tip: Register your rental property with the Military Housing Resource Network and list on privatized housing platforms used by service members during PCS (Permanent Change of Station) orders. Properties listed on MilitaryByOwner.com and ApartmentFinder Military reach the exact tenant pool that will pay BAH rates and sign standard 12-month leases. Military renters actively search for properties listed specifically as military-friendly.
San Diego-Specific Due Diligence
Physical Due Diligence
- Termite inspection (separate from general; SD’s climate and wood construction make termites universal)
- Geological / slope hazard report for canyon-rim properties (San Diego has significant canyon landslide risk)
- Coastal zone verification if within 1 mile of coast (Coastal Commission permit requirements)
- HVAC capacity for SD’s hot summers (marine layer keeps the coast mild but inland SD can exceed 100°F)
- Pool condition if present (common in SD; adds STR appeal but significant maintenance cost)
- Foundation condition for hillside and canyon properties
- Roof condition (SD’s dry climate and sun exposure causes roofing material degradation)
Regulatory and Market Due Diligence
- Verify AB 1482 applicability and whether SFH/condo exemption applies with proper notice
- Confirm ADU eligibility for the specific lot if ADU strategy is planned
- Check STR permit tier eligibility and current permit availability in the neighborhood
- Verify coastal zone status for renovation plans
- Confirm distance to nearest military installation for BAH market analysis
- Research current BAH rates for target ranks at the nearest installation (check BAH.Defense.gov)
- Review all permits at the San Diego Permit Pull system for unpermitted work
Understanding the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA)
Military landlords must understand the SCRA, a federal law that provides specific lease termination rights to active duty service members. Key provisions:
- Lease termination right: A service member who receives orders for a PCS move of more than 35 miles, a deployment of 90+ days, or separation from service can terminate a lease with 30 days written notice, effective the last day of the following calendar month.
- Interest cap: The SCRA caps interest rates (including late fees structured as interest) on obligations incurred before active duty at 6 percent per year during active service periods.
- Eviction protection: Service members may not be evicted from housing during a period of military service if the monthly rent does not exceed a threshold (adjusted annually; currently approximately $4,000 for single-person, higher for families) without a court order.
- Investment implication: SCRA lease terminations are predictable and professional. Military tenants on PCS orders give clear notice, leave the property in excellent condition, and pay rent through the termination date. The SCRA is not a tenant protection concern for San Diego landlords; it is a predictable part of the military rental cycle.
7. Financing Options for San Diego
| Loan Type | Down Payment | Rate Premium | Best For | San Diego Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conventional Investment | 25% | +0.5-0.75% | Properties under $806,500; strong W-2 income | Chula Vista, Kearny Mesa, and inland SD properties often qualify as conforming |
| Jumbo Investment | 25-30% | +0.75-1.25% | Properties above $806,500; most North Park, Pacific Beach, La Jolla | More SD properties qualify as conforming than in LA or SF given lower median price |
| VA Loan (active duty / veterans) | 0% | Below market | Active duty service members and veterans owner-occupying | VA loans are extremely active in San Diego; must owner-occupy but house hacking with multi-unit VA is permitted |
| DSCR Loan | 25-30% | +1.5-2.5% | Investors without W-2 documentation | SD’s 4.5-6% cap rates on military and value-add properties often qualify at 1.0x DSCR coverage |
| House Hacking (FHA) | 3.5% | Standard + MIP | Owner-occupants buying 2-4 unit properties | FHA limit in SD County is $1,006,250 for single-unit; $2,095,200 for 4-unit |
| Portfolio Loan | 20-25% | +1-2% | Multiple properties, self-employed | San Diego community lenders (California Bank & Trust, Pacific Premier) understand SD investor market |
| Hard Money / Bridge | 20-30% | 8-12% rate | BRRRR acquisitions, value-add projects | Active SD hard money market; Barrio Logan and Normal Heights value-add deals common |
VA Loan Advantage for Military Investors: Active duty service members and veterans can use a VA loan to purchase a primary residence with zero down payment. For investors who are military or veteran, the VA loan is the most powerful entry tool in San Diego. Buying a duplex, triplex, or fourplex with a VA loan, occupying one unit, and renting the others is a fully legal and widely used house hacking strategy in San Diego that has been used by service members to build real estate portfolios for decades. The military tenant pool provides immediate qualified applicants for the rental units from the moment you move in.
8. Frequently Asked Questions
Knowledge Quiz: San Diego Real Estate Investment
Open Quiz
5 quick questions on what you just learned about San Diego investing
1) What is the primary reason San Diego has near-zero vacancy rates near military installations?
Answer: C
BAH is the military’s housing allowance paid to service members not living in government housing. At San Diego’s 2026 rates, an E-5 with dependents receives $3,200 to $3,500 monthly specifically to pay rent. When landlords price at BAH, they capture the entire qualified military tenant pool. Military tenants on PCS orders cycle predictably every 2 to 3 years, and SCRA terminations provide clear advance notice. Properties at BAH rate near major installations have had effective zero vacancy for decades.
2) Does San Diego have a local rent control ordinance?
Answer: A
The guide explicitly states that San Diego does not have a local rent control ordinance and has rejected rent control ballot measures multiple times. Only California’s statewide AB 1482 applies, which caps annual increases at 5 percent plus CPI (maximum 10 percent) and requires just cause after 12 months. This is significantly more landlord-friendly than LA’s RSO (3 to 4 percent cap) or SF’s Rent Ordinance (60% of CPI, about 1.7 percent).
3) What is the AB 1482 exemption for single-family homes and why is it important for San Diego investors?
Answer: D
California’s AB 1482 exempts individually owned single-family homes and condominiums when the owner provides specific written notice language in the lease (referencing Civil Code 1946.2 and 1947.12). This removes both the rent increase cap and the just cause eviction requirement, giving San Diego SFH landlords the same operational flexibility as a landlord in a state with no rent control at all. The guide stresses using the correct notice language with an attorney to ensure the exemption is properly invoked.
4) What makes Barrio Logan the guide’s top value-add appreciation pick in San Diego for 2026?
Answer: B
The guide compares Barrio Logan in 2026 to North Park in 2010 and describes it as San Diego’s most compelling gentrification play. The key factors are the 30 to 40 percent price discount to comparable North Park properties, Chicano Park’s status as a national monument anchoring community identity, proximity to San Diego Bay, Naval Station San Diego nearby for military tenant demand, and the active northward gentrification wave from North Park moving south through South Park and into Barrio Logan.
5) What specific San Diego due diligence inspection does the guide flag as unique compared to LA and SF?
Answer: C
The guide specifically flags termite inspection as a San Diego-specific due diligence item separate from the general home inspection. San Diego’s warm, dry climate creates ideal conditions for subterranean and drywood termites, making termite presence essentially universal in older wood-frame construction. Treatment can cost $2,000 to $5,000. Termite inspections are customarily a separate inspection item in San Diego transactions, unlike in most other markets where they are rolled into the general inspection.
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About Our Expert Network
We are finalizing partnerships with verified real estate professionals across every market featured on Builds and Buys. Each expert in our San Diego network is selected for their military housing expertise, value-add renovation experience, and deep knowledge of San Diego’s diverse submarkets.
- Proven track record with military BAH targeting and investment property transactions
- Deep knowledge of North Park, Barrio Logan, and South Bay markets
- ADU development expertise and San Diego permit process familiarity
- Military tenant protocols, SCRA expertise, and BAH rate analysis
- STR permit tier guidance and coastal zone navigation
- Full transaction support from offer through close
Services Covered
- Military BAH market analysis
- Value-add property sourcing
- Investment analysis and underwriting
- ADU development strategy
- STR permit tier guidance
- Buyer representation
- California landlord-tenant attorneys
- VA, DSCR, and jumbo financing
- Property management referrals
- Insurance and inspection referrals
- 1031 exchange coordination
- Exit strategy planning
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San Diego is the most complete real estate investment market in California. Military stability that has never wavered in 80 years. A world-class biotech cluster that adds 8,000 jobs annually. A border economy that is one of the largest bilateral trading relationships in the world. No local rent control. An ADU program that is among the state’s most streamlined. And a climate that has made San Diego one of the most permanently desirable places to live on the Pacific Coast. For investors who want California appreciation without California regulatory complexity, San Diego delivers the answer every time.
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