EveryFull Housefan can recognize the iconic Tanner Family home from the show… or can they?
“Despite my smile, Uncle Jesse was not home,” shecaptioned her post, referring to Stamos' character on the show.
“Cause you’re at the wrong house,” Stamos, 55, cheekily responded.

Full Housefans who want to invest in real estate are in luck, though — the famous house from the show isreturning to the marketthis year.
According to theChronicle, he has not yet determined his asking price.
Franklin — who wasfired as theFuller Houseproducerin 2018 after reported complaints about his behavior in the writers' room —purchased the San Francisco homefor nearly $4 million in 2016.Fuller Housepremiered on Netflix that same year.
While living there, Franklin restored one aspect of the 1883-build to its formerFull Houseglory, painting the previously seafoam-green door back to the red that’s seen on the show. “It will be a lot more fun for the fans because now the house will look like the Tanners really live there,” he said, adding, “It’s a gift to the fans but it’s also fun for me to own it.”
Eric Risberg/AP/REX/Shutterstock

According to theChronicle, he had also planned to remodel the home’s interior and was issued a building permit to do so in 2017, but neighbors appealed it because the Planning Department didn’t notify them in advance as required.
His neighbors said that Franklin was using the home to garner attention forFuller House, which brought hundreds of tourists to the neighborhood each day, the Chronicle reports. At a discretionary review hearing in December 2017, neighbors claimed that Franklin was planning to overhaul the interior of the home to make it look like the Tanner family house (the actual show was filmed on a sound stage), and they were afraid that would draw more fans to the premises.
The San Francisco Board of Appeals revoked his building permit because of the lack of notification.
Initially, Franklin had plans to rent the space out to a San Francisco fan. “It’s a shame to let it sit empty,” he said of the estate. “I will be renting it out, but I’m not sure yet what, where, when or how. At some point soon I will figure that out.”
“The home will always have tremendous emotional significance to me,” Franklin told theSF Chroniclein a statement. “It is a symbol of the shows I love, and the second family I have formed with the casts ofFullandFuller House. Now thatFuller Houseis ending, I will be putting the home back on the market. I hope to find a buyer who wants to make it a full house once again.”
Franklin wasfired as the sitcom’s show runnerin March 2018 and EW confirmed he would no longer be a part of the Netflix sitcom. He was accused of being verbally abusive and making inappropriate statements in the writers' room and on set, according toVariety, which first reported thenews.
source: people.com