San Francisco Travel Association

One Front Street Suite 2900 94111

Why Meet in San Francisco?

San Francisco is a powerful magnet for meetings of all sizes, from self-contained meetings based at one hotel to citywide conventions utilizing multiple properties and The Moscone Center. San Francisco boasts: • 35,000 hotel rooms, with 19,000+ rooms within walking distance of The Moscone Center • 70+ hotels, with 1,100+ new hotel rooms coming in 2024 • Great hotel availability and promotion dates • New and limited time-only incentives for meeting at The Moscone Center. Explore The Moscone Center San Francisco is a premier global destination, famous for fostering new ideas and drawing record-breaking attendance. The city is always changing, and now The Moscone Center has, too. Virtual Venue Tours San Francisco and the surrounding Bay Area offer more than 360 special event facilities and venues—nearly one for every day of the year. If you’re unable to visit San Francisco in person, we can bring San Francisco to you with virtual tours of some of our most popular hotels and special event venues. Explore San Francisco's Neighborhoods Within San Francisco's compact 49 square miles are dozens of distinct, diverse, and inviting neighborhoods. Each one has its own character and charm, and all of them feature venues, restaurants, and attractions you should know about. Official Meeting Planner's Guide to SF Discover what's new for meetings and conventions in San Francisco, find ideas for hosting unforgettable meetings and off-sites, learn about San Francisco neighborhoods, and much more. Discover What the SF Travel Team Can Do for You San Francisco Travel's Convention Sales and Services teams are your destination experts when it comes to the City by the Bay. Our sales team can help you bring meetings of any size to San Francisco by finding the perfect venue and the most convenient hotels. Our services team can provide customized solutions for pre- and post-convention activities. Best of all, their services are free of charge! Safe and Secure Meetings in San Francisco When you host your next meeting in San Francisco, it's not just the San Francisco Travel team who you can count on. There are a number of people ready to assist you in creating an unforgettable experience for your attendees. San Francisco Travel worked in partnership with Block by Block and with the full support of Mayor London Breed to launch the Welcome Ambassador program in October 2021. Our Ambassadors are stationed in some of San Francisco's busiest and most popular neighborhoods to provide assistance with everything from directions to restaurant recommendations to translation services. Additionally, a number of San Francisco's neighborhoods have their own designated Community Benefit Districts. This allows them to fund programs and services that keep the neighborhood clean and safe. Among them are the Union Square Alliance and the Yerba Buena Community Benefit Districts. Workers from each of these organizations are prepared to assist with wayfinding, street cleaning, and more.

Awards

Venue Highlights

Cvent's 2024 Top Meeting Destinations

See Cvent's full list of 2024 Top Meeting Destinations.

Cvent's 2023 Top Meeting Destinations

See Cvent's full list of 2023 Top Meeting Destinations.

Distance from airport

  • San Francisco International Airport (SFO)

    13 mi. from city center

  • Oakland International Airport (OAK)

    20 mi. from city center


Local Attractions

Alamo Square and the Painted Ladies

Recreation
One of the most photographed locations in San Francisco, Alamo Square’s famous “postcard row” is indeed a visual treat. A tight, escalating formation of Victorian houses is backdropped by downtown skyscrapers, and the grassy square itself is an ideal midday break. One of 11 historic districts designated by the Department of City Planning, the area includes several bed-and-breakfast inns.
Corner of Hayes and Steiner Streets
San Francisco, CA

Chinatown

Business district
San Francisco’s Chinatown is one of the largest outside Asia, offering an array of exotic shops, restaurants, food markets, temples, museums and venerable Chinese institutions. Language here is mostly Cantonese and Mandarin; pagoda-style roofs and decorative balconies dominate the architecture, and street lamps are dragon-entwined. Grant Ave., the district’s main street, is a perpetual pageant during the annual Chinese New Year and Moon Festival celebrations.
Grant Ave between Bush St + Columbus Ave
San Francisco, CA

Alcatraz Island

Historical landmark
A mile and a half (2.4 km) from Fisherman’s Wharf, Alcatraz (the name means “pelican” in Spanish) was the site of the first lighthouse built on the Pacific Coast, then a federal prison for such notorious convicts as Al Capone. Now it is one of the city’s most popular attractions. Tours include a self-guided trail, a video presentation and audio tours narrated by former guards and inmates through main cell blocks as well as special programs on famous inmates, fortifications, etc.
Pier 33
1398 The Embarcadero
San Francisco, CA 94133

Civic Center

Business district
A monumental grouping of federal, state and city structures, San Francisco’s Civic Center is the most spacious and, for many, the most impressive in the United States. The magnificently restored City Hall is crowned by a dome taller than the one on the nation’s Capitol; tours of City Hall are conducted on a regular basis. Louise M. Davies Symphony Hall, the War Memorial Veterans Building and the War Memorial Opera House are now collectively known as the San Francisco Performing Arts. SFJAZZ Center, Bill Graham Civic Auditorium — the scene of concerts and civic events — the Main Library and other civic structures are all nearby. The old Main Library has been transformed into the new Asian Art Museum.
Van Ness, Market + Golden Gate Triangle
San Francisco, CA

Cable Cars

Historical landmark
San Francisco is one of the few places in the world where people can ride on a national historic landmark. Refurbished and equipped with new tracks, cables, turntables and cable propulsion machinery, they operate much as they did on Aug. 2, 1873, when Andrew S. Hallidie guided the first car down the Clay Street grade. Today’s fleet totals 40; the adult fare is $6. Volumes have been written about the cable cars and their inventor, but a ride on a cable car and a visit to the Cable Car Museum are the best way to understand the system, its simple mechanics and worldwide popularity.
San Francisco, CA

Embarcadero

Business district
The Embarcadero stretches along the bay where miles of deep-water piers shelter ships of all flags. Here, too, at the foot of Market St., is the Ferry Building. The Ferry Building is a vibrant public space housing high-end retailers, a food hall, restaurants and a farmers’ market. The Ferry Building is also the terminal for ferries to Marin County, Vallejo, Oakland and Alameda. Promenades extend along The Embarcadero from the Ferry Building, past the base of the Oakland Bay Bridge to the South Beach area near King Street.
Southeast of Fisherman's Wharf
San Francisco, CA

Castro District

Business district
Steep streets and brightly painted Victorian houses give this upper Market St. “Gay Mecca” that distinct, San Francisco look. The Castro is filled with imaginative boutiques, bookstores and bars. Built in 1922, the Castro Theatre, 429 Castro St., survives as one of the last grand movie palaces. The San Francisco Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Community Center, 1800 Market St., houses dozens of community organizations. Also of note are Harvey Milk Plaza, dedicated to one of the first openly gay elected officials in the United States, and Pink Triangle Park, a memorial to 15,000 LGBT Holocaust victims. Each June the SF Pride Parade draws 500,000 participants and spectators. The Castro Street Fair unfolds each October.
Market + Castro Streets
San Francisco, CA

Golden Gate Bridge

Historical landmark
Once called “the bridge that couldn’t be built,” today it is one of the seven wonders of the modern world. This magnificent span, perhaps San Francisco’s most famous landmark, opened in 1937 after a four-year struggle against relentless winds, fog, rock and treacherous tides. It links The city with Marin County and the Redwood Empire beyond. Pedestrians and bicyclists can cross free of charge (hours are subject to change). Enjoy a gull’s-eye view down to the decks of oceangoing passenger and cargo liners, aircraft carriers and sailboats.
San Francisco, CA

Convention Centers

  • The Moscone Center

    The Moscone Center (Moscone North, South and West) consists of more than two million square feet of building area, including over 738,000 square of exhibit space, up to 107 meeting rooms, and nearly 152,000 square feet of prefunction lobbies.

    • Exhibit Space797,422 sq. ft.
      Total meeting space502,000 sq. ft.