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California buyers should model a 1%+ new-buyer Prop 13 base rate, then layer in Mello-Roos and wildfire insurance before final affordability decisions.
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County Tax Table
California New-Buyer Property Tax by County
| County | New Buyer Eff Rate | $500K Home | $1M Home | Mello-Roos Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Riverside | 1.35% | $6,750/yr | $13,500/yr | High Mello-Roos in new development areas |
| San Bernardino | 1.32% | $6,600/yr | $13,200/yr | Mello-Roos common in Inland Empire suburbs |
| Alameda | 1.31% | $6,550/yr | $13,100/yr | Parcel taxes and Oakland Hills fire-zone impacts |
| San Diego | 1.22% | $6,100/yr | $12,200/yr | Mello-Roos common in South County communities |
| Santa Clara | 1.22% | $6,100/yr | $12,200/yr | School bonds and selective district overlays |
| Sacramento | 1.20% | $6,000/yr | $12,000/yr | Mello-Roos in Elk Grove/Folsom/new suburbs |
| Los Angeles | 1.16% | $5,800/yr | $11,600/yr | Measure ULA and transfer-tax dynamics |
| Orange (base) | 1.10%* | $5,500/yr* | $11,000/yr* | *Add CFD/Mello-Roos overlays by community |
New-buyer effective rates include Prop 13 base tax plus common local overlays. Listing tax history may reflect prior-owner basis and is not a safe buyer-year assumption.
Use this table as a planning baseline, then validate parcel-level data before final underwriting. In California, two homes at similar price can carry very different recurring tax burden once city overlays, voter-approved bonds, and district-specific assessments are applied.
For newer communities, confirm whether Mello-Roos/CFD obligations are fixed, escalating, or tied to bond schedules. Treat those line items as recurring ownership costs, not one-time closing charges.
Counties with active Mello-Roos CFD districts, particularly Orange County, Riverside, and San Diego South County, can carry effective new-buyer rates well above base figures, so request the annual CFD amount before finalizing payment assumptions.
For offer strategy, run side-by-side payment scenarios: one with city baseline rates and one with listing-specific assumptions. This helps identify affordability risk early, especially where supplemental tax billing or special district assessments may change first-year cash flow.
Why California Is Different
Why California Mortgage Math Is Different
Proposition 13 is often misunderstood by first-time California buyers. It limits annual assessed-value growth for current owners, but at resale the assessment usually resets near purchase price. That is why seller-era tax history can materially understate your buyer-year payment and escrow requirement.
Mello-Roos CFD charges are a separate tax-line cost in many newer communities and can add meaningful monthly burden beyond base property tax. In parts of Orange County, Inland Empire, Sacramento suburbs, and South County San Diego, this single line item can materially change affordability.
Wildfire insurance is now one of the largest payment-surprise risks in California. In recent years, major carriers including State Farm, Allstate, and Farmers have paused or restricted some new-business writing in parts of the state, so quote availability and premium level can vary sharply by address.
Buyers in Cal Fire FHSZ (Fire Hazard Severity Zone) areas should treat insurance as a pre-offer underwriting item, not a post-offer checkbox. Where standard-market coverage is limited, owners may need the California FAIR Plan for basic fire coverage plus a companion policy for liability/theft/water and other non-fire perils.
City transfer-tax rules, jumbo-loan thresholds, and local insurance constraints create California-specific closing and monthly-payment volatility. A practical workflow is: model new-buyer taxes, confirm Mello-Roos/CFD, obtain quote-based insurance, then validate transfer-tax and financing structure before final budget decisions.
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