The Rarest Homes Have Enclosed Front And Back Yards

If you want to sell a home for a potential maximum overbid, you need something rare.

A tasteful remodel with permits helps. A highly functional layout helps. Being in a prime location helps even more.

Beyond those three fundamentals, I strongly recommend trying to buy a home with a view and or one that sits on a large, usable lot. These attributes make it easier to stand out when buyers are comparing dozens of similar listings.

If you can secure at least two out of these five qualities, I am confident you will be extremely pleased when it comes time to sell your property. You will likely have to pay a premium when purchasing, but you'll likely get the premium back and then some when selling.

But there is one more rare attribute that can make some savvy homebuyers go absolutely nuts.

Having both an enclosed front yard and an enclosed backyard. If you're in a big city, this is the unicorn property you want to always be on the hunt for. If you can buy one off market, do your best to take it down!

Most single family homes have enclosed backyards. Some have a front yard and no back yard. Very few also have both enclosed front and back yards. It's like having brains and beauty.

The next time you go for a walk or drive around your neighborhood, count how many homes actually do. There's a good chance you won't find any. Even in the suburbs, they are rare.

Just How Rare Are Enclosed Front Yards In San Francisco

In dense cities like New York City, they are essentially nonexistent.

In San Francisco, they are rare as well. Even in the most expensive neighborhoods such as Presidio Heights and Pacific Heights, fewer than five percent of homes (1 in 20) have truly enclosed front yards, despite properties routinely selling for $5 – $30 million.

Citywide, I estimate that only about 3% – 4% of single family homes in San Francisco have both an enclosed front yard and an enclosed backyard.

Once you layer in the need for a meaningful front setback, permission or grandfathering for a taller front fence or gate, and a layout that does not compromise sidewalk access, the pool shrinks dramatically.

In denser neighborhoods with narrow lots and minimal setbacks, the share is likely closer to 1% – 2%. In more suburban parts of the city, it may approach 4% – 5%.

This rarity matters, as I think it is underappreciated by today's homebuyers. When buyers realize there may only be a handful of comparable homes in the entire city that offer privacy and safety in the front and freedom in the back, competition can turn fierce. Emotional competition is where outsized overbids are born.

$12+ million dollar homes in Pacific Heights with no enclosed front yards and tiny back yards
$10+ million dollar homes in Pacific Heights with no enclosed front yards and tiny back yards.

Why An Enclosed Front Yard Is So Valuable

One of the strongest human instincts is nesting, especially once a woman becomes pregnant. There is a powerful desire to find safe and comfortable shelter for your most precious asset.

This is why bidding wars for move-in ready single family homes are so common. It is also why I recommend buying a home before pregnancy if possible.

Buying while pregnant is like going to the supermarket without a shopping list after not eating for 24 hours. You are hungry, emotional, and discipline tends to disappear. It's easier to overpay given your time crunch.

An enclosed front yard taps directly into this instinct.

Once you walk through the gate, the outside world gets psychologically locked out. Even if the gate could technically be climbed, the psychological safety of having a defined boundary is incredibly powerful.

Parents are genetically programmed to protect their young, and an enclosed front yard creates a buffer between your front door and the street.

As children grow into toddlers and beyond, an enclosed front yard becomes invaluable. You can let them play outside with far less anxiety. They are not going to run into the street or wander off unnoticed.

A Personal Example Of Why This Matters

With a prior home I sold in 2025 with a preemptive offer, the house had ocean views and a large side by side driveway where my kids and I would draw chalk and scooter around. But I was always nervous when they were there. One careless chase of a ball into the street could have resulted in disaster.

So I improvised. I parallel parked my car in front of the driveway to act as a buffer. I then lined up the trash, compost, and recycling bins along the sidewalk edge for extra protection.

It worked, but it was a workaround.

Meanwhile, passersby would constantly stop to chat. Most were friendly, but sometimes you just want to be left alone. Having an enclosed front yard would have helped.

If you have pets, the value increases further. An enclosed front yard and backyard is dog heaven. You stop worrying about traffic, escape attempts, or recall commands that mysteriously stop working when a squirrel appears.

Why Having A Gate Is Essential

To truly have an enclosed front yard, you need a gate.

A usable front yard is still wonderful. However, without a gate, it does not provide the same mental relief. A gated yard creates a sense of privacy and control that landscaping alone cannot fully provide.

The higher the gate, the stronger that feeling becomes. Meanwhile, consider planting hedges all around your yard that will eventually grow thick and tall, giving you even more privacy.

Having a gate is similar to getting a term life insurance policy when your children are born. You feel a tremendous sense of relief. However, unlike securing affordable life insurance, not everyone can enclose their front yard due to city code restrictions.

The Rarest Property Has An Enclosed Front and Back Yard
A wonderful Golden Gate Heights, San Francisco home with an enclosed front yard and gate. Over time, the hedges will grow and provide more privacy.

Why Enclosed Front Yards Are So Rare In Big Cities

Most people assume enclosed front yards are rare simply because land is expensive. That is true, but incomplete.

You actually need several things to be true at the same time, and cities are designed to prevent at least one of them from happening.

You Need A Meaningful Front Setback

An enclosed front yard requires depth. Based on city codes, you need enough distance between the sidewalk and the front wall of the home to create a usable outdoor space. I'm talking enough space to kick or pass the ball around.

However, in many classic urban neighborhoods, the building comes right up to the sidewalk. Think New York City brownstones, Boston rowhouses, and many older San Francisco blocks. You might get a stoop or a narrow strip of landscaping, but not enough space to create the feeling of a separate front yard.

Most single-family homes in San Francisco have setbacks of between 0 – 10 feet from the sidewalk. A home on a 2,300 sqft lot I sold in 2017 had a gate the opened right out to the sidewalk. It was on a busy street around the corner from one of the busiest streets in San Francisco. Although it had a small backyard, it didn't feel comfortable raising young children there.

While homes on larger than standard 2,500 lots may have setbacks as deep as 15 feet, which is rare. However, even with a 15 feet deep front yard, that's not very big.

As land values rise, builders and owners have a strong incentive to push the structure forward and maximize interior square footage. Over time, the market quietly votes against front yard depth, which is why it's so rare. You need an enormous lot, which is also rare.

front setback area, rear yard, side yard, buildable area for permits in San Francisco. Having a large front yard that is enclosed tough to find
Given how valuable land is in big cities, builders tend to build homes up to the dash-dot line where the front setback area starts. As a result, having a front yard is a luxury that usually requires a large lot.

Cities Often Discourage Tall Enclosures Facing The Street

Cities like visibility. They want eyes on the street, predictable sightlines, and sidewalks that feel open.

In San Francisco, fences in required front setbacks are generally limited to three feet. Three feet marks territory, but it does not create privacy or the feeling of a protected courtyard.

To get that enclosed feeling, most people want something closer to chest height or preferably higher. That is exactly where the rules tend to bite. You would need a permit to build a fence that's taller, which is sometimes not approved based on what your neighbor’s have. Further, 75% of the fence needs to be open air.

Your Front Yard Might Not Fully Be Yours

In many cities, the area that feels like your front yard may overlap with required public access zones or even the public right of way (ROW).

In San Francisco, anything that encroaches into sidewalk space can trigger permits and enforcement. Pedestrian standards often expect a continuous clear path, with six feet wide considered desirable and four feet considered the minimum.

This is why people sometimes receive unexpected notices from the city after making improvements they assumed were allowed on their property.

I learned this the hard way during COVID. After building three and a half foot planter boxes in the front yard of my old house with openings in 2015, seven years later, I was either reported or noticed by the city and told to remove them or pay a $3,000 fine.

They looked beautiful and were not on the sidewalk, but on my property. What a crock.

Enclosed Front Yards Create Private Value But Public Friction

An enclosed front yard is like a private outdoor room. The sidewalk is a public corridor. Where the two meet, cities tend to prioritize access and predictability over personal sanctuary.

Enclosures can block sightlines, narrow the effective sidewalk width, and change the feel of a block. One person’s peaceful courtyard is another person’s complaint about a street feeling closed in.

This tension explains why the default setting in many cities is to make enclosed front yards difficult to build. So if you can find a home with one grandfathered in, all the better.

Land value as a share of property value by area in America

Even Where Front Yards Exist Full Enclosures Are Still Rare

In more spread out cities, front yards are more common. But full enclosures remain the exception. Fence height limits, transparency requirements, and placement rules often prevent turning a front yard into a semi private room.

So rarity is not just about whether a front yard exists. It is about whether you are allowed to enclose it in a meaningful way.

The Practical Takeaway

Before you fall in love with a home’s enclosed front yard potential, check two things carefully: the required front setback and the permitted front fence height. Ask specifically whether the front yard can be enclosed and, if so, how far out the fence can extend. It is not always obvious, and assumptions can be costly.

If a home already has both a gated front yard and an enclosed backyard, especially on a larger lot with a view, you are looking at something extremely rare. Move decisively before others do.

Outdoor space also quietly enhances your quality of life. In spring, summer, and fall, your living space expands outdoors. When it is 75 degrees and sunny, you are not eating lunch inside. You are enjoying peaceful picnics under mature trees in your own cozy private space.

So the next time you are house hunting, pay attention to how few homes offer both an enclosed front yard and an enclosed backyard. If you find one, buy it. When it comes time to sell, that rarity will likely command a meaningful premium over comparable homes without an enclosed front yard.

Readers, do you own a home with an enclosed front yard and backyard? Did you realize just how rare enclosed front yards are in your city? Have you ever deliberately searched for a home with this type of outdoor layout?

Invest In Real Estate Passively

Not everyone can buy a single-family home with an enclosed front yard and backyard, especially in big cities. When one does come on the market, competition is fierce and prices can quickly stretch beyond what feels reasonable.

That does not mean you have to miss out on the feel good wealth effect of real estate.

One way I continue to invest in real estate beyond my own properties is through Fundrise, my preferred private real estate investment platform. Fundrise provides diversified exposure to residential and industrial real estate across the country without the headaches of property management or the stress of local bidding wars.

The platform focuses on assets with scarcity value, constrained supply, and long term durability, the same traits that make enclosed front yard homes so desirable over time. Fundrise is a long-time sponsor of Financial Samurai as our investment philosophies are aligned.

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MC
MC
1 month ago

Yes, we sold the property to move back to the Midwest to be close to family.

MC
MC
1 month ago

Hi Sam

I couldn’t agree with you more!

We had the honor and privilege of living on a 10K sf lot in Kuulei Tract, Kailua, Oahu just a few hundred feet from Kailua Beach for seven years with a gated front courtyard and cedar fenced back yard with a pool. The courtyard was entirely cement which we removed and planted with grass, a plumeria tree and a foot bridge over koi ponds. We planted creeping ficus to soften the white cinderblock wall. We could see the Koolaus over the front wall from the living room and at times hear the ocean from the backyard.

Our realtor could not understand why I was holding out for a property in that neighborhood when there were bright and shiny “perfect” homes in Kahala and Hawaii Kai. We looked at 93 homes before meeting a woman on the beach on Christmas Day that sold us her home. I’ll take a 1951 single wall construction in a prime neighborhood any day,

By far my most favorite home and cherished memories.

Take care and thanks for all you do!

P
P
1 month ago

Hey Sam,

Sorry about your less-than-ideal Tahoe experience.

I wanted to share feedback from our very recent – or should I say current – real estate experience here in Center City Philadelphia.

In two days on the market, we received seven offers over asking price on our sweet little row house where we lived for 23 years. It’s on a great street, but it’s quite small (<1500 square feet). Ultimately, three of the offers were cash only and all of these were willing to waive inspections – on a house originally built in the mid-1800s – and close within 2-3 weeks. A bidding war ensued and we've now got a signed contract at 13% over asking.

So the bottom line: a lot of pent-up demand and what seems like a pretty frothy market!

Best,
P

Jen
Jen
1 month ago

All of the houses in my neighborhood are on 1-2 acre lots with lots of trees so fences are not needed for privacy. Building a fence would be 1. extremely expensive without any privacy gains, 2. would look out of place with the neighborhood and 3. would likely be damaged by branches or deer.

Jen
Jen
1 month ago

Outside Nashville.

letro
letro
1 month ago
Reply to  Jen

Hi Jen, We live in Easton, MD on 2 acres with pond, creek, woods, horse farm outback, 1 mile from great safe town and 2 miles to Chesapeake Bay. The ranch house is $500k / $2k property & school taxes = rebuy house with taxes in 250 years. My Wife had private medical practice in town. I commuted to electric company in Anacostia DC. Now retired 10 years we enjoy six months at home and rent May thru October Waikoloa beach Hawaii, SCUBA on ! The cities Baltimore & DC are not safe places to live based on 45 years experience. We always lived in safe communities outside the city.

David
David
1 month ago

Does living in a gated community (on a large lot) with an enclosed rear yard meet this criteria?

Canadian Reader
Canadian Reader
1 month ago

Love this article. Totally true!!

My back cement fence is falling over and when we get it replaced, I want to close in the front yard too. I’m a corner lot with 30FT frontage, and the public sidewalk and blvd measures another 11FT. We closed off the busy street side with cedar trees, but the gated look is so grand. I’ll have to check if it’s still allowed. There are lots of properties here with cement/ iron closing gates in the front yard.

KO
KO
1 month ago

This sounds like the buying opportunity we jumped on in 2022. Enclosed front yard surrounded by short brick planters and wrought iron fence with a front and side gate, plus big back yard, and we pounced on the house when our friends who owned it decided to move. The front yard is secure, but also completely on display. I receive lots of attention and comments when I am out tending the front, mostly welcome, but also some people can act a bit weird. I am creating planting zones that break up the view to increase privacy, so that we can actually use the front porch for sitting instead of being exotic fish on display!

One rule of landscaping is that when defining an enclosed space, make the fence or hedge at least 1/3 the height of the narrow dimension of the space. It creates a psychological sense that the place is secure.

KO
KO
1 month ago

For instance, when creating a paver seating area, in order to make the area feel like a zone and anchored to its surroundings, place a border of some form around the area with a height of 1/3 of the shortest dimension of the area. If the area is a 12-foot square, then make the border 4 ft high. The border can be a hedge, planters, a wall, etc.

Fay
Fay
1 month ago

This is exactly why we’ve stayed in our home. Built in the early ’70s, yes, but sitting in the city, on a ¾-acre fenced yard backing to a greenway, walkout basement, cul-de-sac, pool, mature trees and plantings that create full privacy, and 10 minutes from downtown. You can update a house… you can’t recreate a lot like this.

Kevin
Kevin
1 month ago

Lucky enough to own a flag lot home. It’s a shy half acre.Super long gated driveway, then you turn left at the end to see the house. Beautiful mature trees and landscaping. Ocean view from upstairs is the cherry on top. Being able to close the gate and walk out with bed head is pretty darn special. Great article which made me realize how lucky I am-

Kevin
Kevin
1 month ago

Oceanside,Ca. Definitely in the city, but in an area where you can find perhaps 3 other houses like ours. It was an old orchard area. Farmers would cut in houses behind theirs for income. The area eventually filled in around the flag lots. One mile from the ocean. It is pretty rare.We call it our oasis by the sea:)

Kevin
Kevin
26 days ago

We are just a few minutes from Legoland.Stop by next time, kids love our house! It’s pretty whimsical. Oceanside really has been discovered. Lots of young families here. Many folks work in North County. Lots of commuters to San Diego or techies in Sorrento Valley. Fair amount of retired folks now. With great restaurants, a cool museum etc. it’s really a great place to live!

TW
TW
1 month ago

Our first home in California 30+ years ago was a on a 50′ x 100′ city lot with a fully enclosed front and backyard. Yes, we had neighbors on 3 sides, but having that privacy was amazing, especially when we started having kids. You’re right about the gate too. At first the driveway was open to the street and EVERYONE that walked by turned their heads to look inside. Once we installed a gate it immediately stopped the looky-loos. The next house we bought was on rural acreage, and we spent considerable time and effort enclosing about half of the property with privacy fencing mostly to keep the deer out and the dog and kids in).

TW
TW
1 month ago

Elderly parents lived in another state. Three kids in a 2 bedroom 1 bath house. Priced out of the local market (Santa Barbara). The house tripled in value in 10 years. Sold it and bought a house double the size on acreage for less than half the price (your geographic arbitrage strategy). In retrospect, it was the best possible decision on a number of factors. Started a tech business with the some of the house sale proceeds that eventually grew to a 10x of potential earnings. Sold the tech business after 18 years and retired.

Jamie
Jamie
1 month ago

Ha that’s so true now that I think about it. Most front yards that I’ve seen aren’t usable. They might have some nice landscaping, but other than that there’s no usable space for kids to play or to lounge. Where I grew up in the suburbs there were more homes that had usable front yards, but in every city I’ve lived in they are pretty much nonexistent. Great good for thought.

Ian
Ian
1 month ago

This is a very interesting take. You have described my personal residence. I have an enclosed courtyard with a tall fence/gate before the front door. In the backyard I have a patio with pergola along with spiral paths next to plants and flowers. Everything is fenced in on a .25 acre parcel. I reside in a suburb of Los Angeles.

I always enjoyed my home but this is a perfect description of exactly why. There is definitely a sense of privacy and security. It also makes the space seem much larger than the square footage. The home was based upon a Joseph Eichler design. Midcentury modern architects definitely knew their stuff.

OC2SV
OC2SV
1 month ago

Great topic. Lot location, lack of slope and gated front yards are key premiums to look for when purchasing. We scored with a locking gated front courtyard, totally flat lot , middle of the block before the bulb of the cul de sac and big grass backyard with 30 year mature tropical landscaping.