Few pieces of California tax law affect real estate decisions as directly as Proposition 19. Passed by voters in November 2020 and phased into effect beginning February 2021, Prop 19 restructured two fundamental pillars of California property taxation: how seniors and other eligible homeowners can carry their low property tax base when they move, and how property passes between generations without triggering reassessment. If you own a home in Berkeley, Kensington, El Cerrito, or anywhere in the East Bay, understanding Prop 19 is not optional. It determines whether selling your current home and buying another one will cost you thousands more in annual property taxes, and it shapes decisions your children and grandchildren will face after you are gone.
I work with sellers in Berkeley who have owned their homes for twenty, thirty, even forty years. Their Proposition 13 assessed values are often a fraction of today’s market values, which means they are paying property taxes on a base that has grown at no more than 2 percent per year since they bought. For a Berkeley homeowner who paid $200,000 in 1990 and now has a home worth $1.8 million, the gap between what they pay and what a new buyer would pay is enormous. Prop 19 is the mechanism that governs whether that advantage can travel with them to their next home, and whether it can be preserved for their family after they sell.
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The Portability Benefit: Why Eligible Sellers Can Now Move More Freely
The most significant upgrade Prop 19 delivered for sellers is statewide portability of the base year value. Before April 1, 2021, California’s older portability programs (Propositions 60 and 90) allowed seniors 55 and older to transfer their low property tax base to a replacement home of equal or lesser value, but only within the same county or between a limited set of participating counties. Alameda County was one of the ten counties that allowed intercounty transfers under the old rules, but moving to, say, Sonoma or Santa Cruz County meant losing your tax base entirely.
Under Prop 19, eligible homeowners can transfer their factored base year value (FBSV) to a replacement primary residence anywhere in California, regardless of which county the replacement property is in. This is a meaningful change for Berkeley homeowners who want to relocate to the coast, the wine country, or closer to family in another region while keeping the property tax level they have had over decades.
Eligibility for the portability benefit extends to three groups:
- Homeowners who are at least 55 years old at the time of selling the original property (only one owner of the property needs to meet the age requirement)
- Homeowners who are severely and permanently disabled
- Victims of a Governor-declared wildfire or other natural disaster whose original property sustained more than 50 percent damage
The original home and the replacement home must both be primary residences, and the seller must apply for the homeowners’ exemption on the new property. The two transactions, the sale of the original home and the purchase or completion of the replacement home, must occur within two years of each other, and there is no requirement for a specific sequence.
Prop 19 also expanded portability from a once-in-a-lifetime event to a three-time lifetime benefit. Each of the three transfers uses the FBSV of the home sold at that time, not of some original property. For seniors who have already moved once under the old rules, Prop 19 does not reset the count, but it does open up additional uses for those who have only moved once and are planning another transition.
How the Math Works When You Move Up or Down
One of the most practically useful features of Prop 19 is that it removes the requirement that the replacement home be of equal or lesser value. Under the old Prop 60/90 rules, buying a more expensive home meant losing the tax base transfer entirely. Under Prop 19, buying up is allowed, and the formula simply adds the difference between the sale price of your original home and the purchase price of the replacement to your transferred tax base.
The comparison of values depends on the timing of the transactions. If you purchase the replacement home before selling your original home, the comparison uses 100 percent of the original home’s sale price as the threshold. If you purchase the replacement within the first year after the sale, the threshold rises to 105 percent of the original sale price. If the purchase falls in the second year after the sale, the threshold is 110 percent. After two years from the date of sale, the transfer option expires entirely. You cannot complete a qualifying replacement purchase after that window closes, regardless of circumstances, because the two-year deadline is written into the California Constitution and the Board of Equalization has no authority to extend it.
Here is what that progression means in practice, and why it creates a counterintuitive incentive worth understanding. A higher threshold is better for the buyer. It reduces the amount of “excess” that gets added to your transferred tax base, which in turn reduces your annual property taxes on the replacement home. Waiting until year two produces the most favorable comparison, because the 110 percent threshold gives you a larger buffer before any excess kicks in. Buying before the sale gives you the smallest buffer, at 100 percent.
To see why this matters, consider a Berkeley seller who sells for $1.5 million with a factored base year value of $300,000, and wants to purchase a replacement home for $1.8 million. If they buy before selling, the threshold is $1.5 million and the excess is $300,000, making the new assessed value $600,000. If they wait until the first year after the sale, the threshold becomes $1,575,000 (105 percent), the excess drops to $225,000, and the new assessed value is $525,000. If they wait until the second year, the threshold is $1,650,000 (110 percent), the excess is only $150,000, and the new assessed value is $450,000. At a 1.25 percent effective tax rate, waiting until year two in this example saves roughly $1,875 per year compared to buying in year one, and $1,875 per year more than buying before the sale. Over ten years that is $18,750 in compounding property tax savings, simply from timing the replacement purchase strategically.
The practical implication is that sellers who know they will be buying up significantly and are not in a rush may benefit from deliberately waiting until the second year to make their replacement purchase, provided they are confident they can complete it before the two-year window closes. This is not intuitive because most people assume moving quickly is financially prudent. For Prop 19 purposes, when you are buying up, patience has a measurable dollar value.
The tradeoff, of course, is that waiting two years means renting or otherwise bridging the gap between selling and buying, and that carrying cost needs to be weighed against the property tax savings. Two additional risks deserve consideration. First, Berkeley and California property values have historically appreciated over time, meaning a replacement home that costs $1.8 million today may cost meaningfully more in year two, potentially erasing the tax savings from the higher threshold. Second, interest rates can rise over that same window, increasing borrowing costs on the replacement purchase in ways that dwarf the property tax benefit. For Berkeley sellers moving to significantly more expensive homes, the threshold math often favors the wait, but the decision needs to account for market conditions and rate risk alongside the property tax calculation.
How to Claim the Benefit: Filing Form BOE-19-B
The portability benefit does not transfer automatically. After both transactions are complete and you are living in your replacement home, you must file Form BOE-19-B with the County Assessor’s office in the county where the replacement property is located. For East Bay buyers who are staying in Alameda County, that means the Alameda County Assessor’s Office at 1221 Oak Street in Oakland. The form requires documentation of both sale prices, proof of your age or disability, and proof that you are occupying the replacement home as your primary residence. The claim must be filed within three years of purchasing or completing the replacement property to receive full retroactive relief. Filing late means losing some or all of the refund for taxes paid at the full assessed value in the interim period. This is not done through escrow, and it is not automatic, so I always flag the deadline for my clients when we close on a replacement purchase.
The Other Side of Prop 19: What Changed for Families Inheriting Property
Prop 19 gave with one hand and took with the other. For families hoping to pass on a family home while preserving the low property tax base for their heirs, the law dramatically narrowed the path that had existed under the old Proposition 58 (parent-to-child transfers) and Proposition 193 (grandparent-to-grandchild transfers).
Before February 16, 2021, parents could transfer a primary residence and up to $1 million in assessed value of other properties to their children without triggering reassessment. A child could inherit a rental property or a vacation home and keep the parent’s tax base indefinitely, even without living in the property. Under Prop 19, only the family home qualifies for the exclusion, and even that comes with conditions that are easy to miss.
For a parent-to-child transfer (or grandparent-to-grandchild transfer, subject to additional conditions) to avoid full reassessment, the inherited property must have been the transferor’s primary residence, the child or grandchild who receives the property must establish it as their primary residence within one year of the date of transfer (specifically the date on the recorded deed, not the date of death), and the difference between the home’s fair market value at the time of transfer and the parent’s FBSV must fall below a cap that is adjusted every two years by the State Board of Equalization. For transfers occurring between February 16, 2025 and February 15, 2027, that cap is $1,044,586. Any amount above the parent’s FBSV that also exceeds the cap gets added to the assessed value for property tax purposes.
Using an example grounded in Berkeley’s market: if your FBSV is $350,000 and your home’s fair market value at the time you transfer it to your child is $950,000, the gap is $600,000. Since $600,000 is below the current cap of $1,044,586, your child would inherit your $350,000 tax base entirely, provided they move in within one year and file for the homeowners’ exemption. If, however, your home is worth $1.6 million and your FBSV is $300,000, the gap is $1.3 million. That exceeds the cap by $255,414, so your child’s assessed value would be $300,000 plus $255,414, or $555,414, rather than $300,000 or the full $1.6 million. That is still a meaningful savings, but no longer the full exclusion.
The one-year occupancy clock runs from the deed date. This catches families off guard in probate situations where months can pass between death and the recording of the deed. I always recommend that sellers and their families consult an estate planning attorney before any intergenerational transfer, because the Prop 19 implications interact directly with capital gains tax planning, trust structures, and family dynamics around property ownership.
The filing form for parent-to-child transfers is BOE-19-P, and for grandparent-to-grandchild transfers (which require the parents to be deceased to qualify), it is BOE-19-G. Both are filed with the Alameda County Assessor’s Office when the property is in Alameda or Contra Costa County. The filing window opens after the transfer and generally should be completed within three years, though the one-year occupancy requirement is the more pressing deadline.
California Prop 19 Calculator
Use this calculator to estimate the net property tax changes when selling or transferring your home under Proposition 19.
California Proposition 19 Calculator
Estimate your property tax base transfer or inheritance exclusion under Prop 19
Estimate your property tax base transfer when you sell and buy a replacement primary residence. Applies to homeowners 55+, severely disabled, or victims of a Governor-declared disaster.
Estimate whether an inherited Berkeley home qualifies for partial reassessment exclusion under Prop 19, and what your property tax would be if you move in as your primary residence within one year.
What This Means for the Berkeley Market
In practical terms, Prop 19 has been a quiet accelerant for seller motivation among long-time East Bay homeowners who had previously felt locked into their homes by the prospect of losing their tax base. A seller who has been sitting on a $4,000 annual tax bill in a home worth $2 million now knows they can buy a smaller home in Sonoma or on the Mendocino coast and carry that low assessed value with them, adjusted only for any price difference. That unlocks inventory that would not otherwise be available, and it shifts the conversation from “I can’t afford to leave” to “let me figure out where I want to go.”
At the same time, Prop 19’s restrictions on family inheritance have created urgency for families who own appreciated property and want to think carefully about timing. Some East Bay families who had planned to eventually transfer a home to their children without reassessment are now grappling with a much more limited exclusion and strict occupancy requirements that do not always match the realities of their children’s lives, particularly in high-cost housing markets where adult children may be renters in other cities or states.
Understanding both dimensions of this law, the expanded portability for eligible sellers and the narrowed exclusion for heirs, allows my clients to make better-informed decisions about when to sell, how to structure a transfer, and what to expect from their property taxes after any major real estate transaction.
A Note on Capital Gains and Professional Advice
Prop 19 addresses property tax only. It has no effect on federal or California capital gains tax obligations when a property is sold. The federal exclusion of $250,000 per person (or $500,000 for a married couple) for gains on the sale of a primary residence is a separate calculation governed by IRS Section 121, and California follows its own rules for the state tax side. I always recommend that my sellers consult with their CPA or tax advisor before closing so that the full picture, property tax portability, capital gains exposure, and any estate planning considerations, is clear before the transaction closes. The California State Board of Equalization’s Prop 19 resource page is the authoritative source for current forms, letters to assessors, and updated exclusion cap figures.
If you are a long-time Berkeley homeowner thinking about your next move, and you are not sure how Prop 19 applies to your situation, I am glad to help you think it through. Every situation is different, and the property tax piece is just one part of the analysis. What I can tell you is that for many of my clients, understanding Prop 19 has been the deciding factor that made selling feel possible for the first time in years.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about how Proposition 19 affects Berkeley homeowners
This content is provided for general informational purposes and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Consult a licensed attorney and CPA for advice specific to your situation. Megan Micco, DRE #01930373 · Compass · 1625 Shattuck Ave, Berkeley, CA



