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Proposition 13 / 60

Proposition 13 / 60

OVER 55? CALIFORNIA PROPERTY TAX RELIEF

Since its passage, Proposition 13 prohibits property tax increases until property ownership is changed.

If either spouse is over age 55 (when the old home is sold), PROP 60 allows replacement of a primary residence with a new home of equal or lesser value (but see below) within the same county and transfer of the Prop 13 assessed valuation from the old home to the new property. This is allowed once in your lifetime, and a spouse who has done it before ‘taints’ both spouses.

PROP 90 allows counties to elect to accept transfers of Prop 13 values for moves from other counties when a primary residence is replaced with a less expensive (but see below) home. If you are over 55 and move into a county which accepts Prop 90, you may take your old, lower Prop 13 value, regardless of from which county you move.

Using Prop 90, you can sell your $400,000 San Francisco home [assessed value $80,000] and move to a new $300,000 home in San Mateo; the new San Mateo assessed value will be $80,000!

8 COUNTIES WHICH ACCEPT PROP 90 (Current as of 12/28/2010)
Alameda, El Dorado, Los Angeles, Orange, San Diego, San Mateo, Santa Clara, and Ventura. [Contra Costa, Inyo, Kern, Riverside, Modoc, Monterey, and Marin have dropped out of the Prop 90 program.] El Dorado is new to the program, effective in 2010.

Props 60 and 90 apply if you “trade down” (i.e. the new home costs less than the sales price of the old home).

If you buy New Home 1st; then sell the Old Home, you must go down in price.

If you sell the Old Home1st; then buy the New Home:

  • In 1st 365 days after the sale of Old Home, you may go up 5% in the purchase price of New Home.
  • If you buy New Home more than 1 year from the sale of Old Home, but less than 2 years, you may go up 10%.
    Some buyers can pay the commission outside of escrow to lower to sales price. Example: I sold for $100,000 and then want to buy next week for $120,000. The seller will owe a commission of $7,200. The seller will owe $2,800 of other expenses

I sold 1st so I must buy for no more than $105,000. If I pay the seller’s expenses of $10,000, the price is down to $110,000. Hmm. If I buy the stove, refrigerator, and lawn furniture for $6,000, it looks like I qualify. WARNING: I do not suggest this is a valid idea.

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