About
Sixth generation. First principles.
Angus MacDonald is a sixth-generation San Franciscan and a broker at 360SF Real Estate. He grew up in the Richmond District and works the west side of the city first.
His career started on the institutional side: acquiring single-family foreclosures for a national fund, then underwriting deals at a residential syndication platform in the Bay Area. Nearly a decade in finance before brokerage. The habits stuck. Every engagement still starts with a model, and the model runs on your actual numbers.
Today he works with long-term homeowners across San Francisco. Most clients have owned their homes for decades and are weighing what to do next: sell now, sell later, transfer within the family, hold for income, or downsize using Prop 19. The conversation is built around the property and the tax math. The listing is the outcome, not the starting point.

The record
Where the judgment comes from.
| Years | Role | The work |
|---|---|---|
| 2024– | Broker, 360SF Real Estate | Listing-focused brokerage practice, San Francisco |
| 2022–2024 | Owner-builder, 738–740 21st Ave | Full duplex renovation, no general contractor |
| 2017–2024 | Greenline Ventures / Greenline Realty | Syndication platform: $100M AUM, 250 units. Acquisitions, underwriting, investor relations |
| 2015 | Realtex Group | Development finance and entitlements, two 50+ unit mixed-use projects |
| 2012–2014 | McKinley Partners | Founding senior analyst, institutional single-family fund: $92M, 536 homes |
| 2011 | Cassidy Turley (now Cushman & Wakefield) | Capital markets analyst |
Licensed CA salesperson 2012 · CA broker 2024 · B.S. Business Administration (Economics), Santa Clara University
The flagship file
Two years on 21st Ave.
In 2022 Angus bought a two-unit condo building on 21st Ave in the Central Richmond, his own neighborhood, and spent two years renovating it as owner-builder. No general contractor. He pulled the permits, managed the subs, and lived on-site through the whole thing.
The scope covered six bathrooms, two kitchens, the full exterior envelope, electrical, and hardwood floors throughout. The building’s value rose roughly 40 percent, and rent from the second unit now covers 120 percent of ownership costs.
It was his own capital and his own risk. It is also the reason his prep plans read like a builder wrote them: scope, budgets, and timelines from someone who has carried them personally.
Read the case file

Start with the numbers.
Describe the property and what you are weighing. The first call is thirty minutes, free, and specific to your situation.