Securing a Coveted Spot in San Francisco’s Community Gardens

San Francisco has 42 community gardens spread across the city, managed through SF Recreation & Parks. Anyone can sign up for a plot. It's free, it's real, and the application is right on the Parks and Rec website.


The catch: waitlists can run 5 to 10 years. The Fort Mason community garden is currently sitting at 9 years!

Why So Many People Want In

Gardening isn't just a hobby. A 2017 study in Preventive Medicine Reports found that just 30 minutes of gardening reduced cortisol — the body's primary stress hormone — by an average of 27.3%, with some participants seeing reductions up to 47%.

How to Actually Get a Plot Faster

The waitlist isn't the only path. Two ways to move faster:

  1. Show up on a workday. Many gardens host volunteer workdays open to the public. Show up, help out, and you can often earn access to a plot without ever touching the waitlist.

  2. Start a new one. Most of SF's community gardens exist because neighbors petitioned the city to convert an unused lot into green space. If your block has an underused parcel, SF Rec & Parks has a process for exactly this. It takes time and organizing, but it's how the whole program got started.

The Other Option

If you want outdoor space on your own timeline — a yard, a deck, a deep balcony — the most reliable path is owning it. No waitlist. No petition. Just yours from day one!

If that's something you're working toward, I'd love to help you find it. Book a free 15-minute call here.

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