Proposition 58 in One Paragraph

Proposition 58 was a 1986 California ballot measure that created a parent-child exclusion from property tax reassessment. Under Prop 58, when a parent transferred property to a child (or vice versa), the transfer was excluded from the normal reassessment that would otherwise push the property's assessed value up to current market value. This applied to a parent's primary residence regardless of value, and up to $1 million of assessed value for other properties. For families who had owned California homes for decades, this exclusion was enormously valuable, allowing children to inherit a home with property taxes based on an assessed value that might be a fraction of the current market price.

Proposition 19 in One Paragraph

Proposition 19 passed in November 2020 and took effect on February 16, 2021. It significantly narrowed the parent-child exclusion that Prop 58 had established. Under Prop 19, the primary residence exclusion still exists, but it now comes with two critical new conditions: the inheriting child must use the property as their own primary residence within one year of the transfer, and if the property's fair market value at the time of transfer exceeds the parent's assessed value by more than $1 million, the excess above that $1 million threshold is added to the assessed value. Other properties, such as rental homes, vacation houses, or commercial real estate, no longer qualify for the parent-child exclusion at all.

The Three Big Changes

Change 1: The primary residence requirement. Under Prop 58, a child could inherit a parent's home and rent it out indefinitely at the parent's low assessed value. Under Prop 19, the child must move into the home as their primary residence within 12 months or the property is reassessed to full market value. This single change affects many families whose children do not live near or cannot afford to move into the inherited home.

Change 2: The $1 million cap on the exclusion benefit. Even when the child does move in, the exclusion is no longer unlimited. If the market value of the home exceeds the parent's assessed value by more than $1 million, the excess above that $1 million cushion is tacked onto the assessed value. So if a home is assessed at $200,000 but is worth $1,500,000, the difference is $1,300,000. Subtract $1,000,000 from that, and $300,000 is added to the $200,000 assessed value, giving a new assessed value of $500,000 rather than the full market value of $1,500,000. The child still saves money, but far less than under Prop 58.

Change 3: Non-primary-residence property no longer excluded. Under Prop 58, up to $1 million of assessed value in other properties was excluded from reassessment. Prop 19 eliminated this entirely. Rental homes, investment properties, vacation homes, and commercial real estate owned by parents now reassess at full market value when transferred to children, period.

Before and After: Side-by-Side

FeatureProp 58 (before Feb 16, 2021)Prop 19 (after Feb 16, 2021)
Primary residence exclusionYes, unlimited value, no residency requirementYes, but child must move in within 1 year
Cap on primary residence exclusionNone$1M gap between assessed and market value
Other real property exclusionUp to $1M assessed valueEliminated entirely
Rental property after inheritanceAllowed at parent's assessed valueReassessed to market value immediately
Effective date1986 through Feb 15, 2021February 16, 2021 and onward

Who Is Hurt Most by the Change

The families most affected by Prop 19 are those in high-appreciation California markets where the gap between the parent's assessed value and today's market value is largest. A family in the Bay Area, Los Angeles, or San Diego where a parent bought a home in the 1970s or 1980s for $100,000 that is now worth $1.5 million faces a dramatic change in outcome. Under Prop 58, children could inherit and rent out that home paying taxes on $100,000 of assessed value. Under Prop 19, if no child moves in, the property reassesses to $1.5 million, potentially tripling or quadrupling the annual property tax bill.

Families with multiple heirs who cannot all agree on who should move in, or where the child who wants to keep the home cannot afford to buy out the siblings, are in a particularly difficult position. This is where specialty trust loans and beneficiary buyout loans can preserve the exclusion that would otherwise be lost.

How Equalization Loans Preserve Value Under Prop 19

If one heir wants to keep the inherited home and qualify for the Prop 19 exclusion, they typically need to buy out their co-inheriting siblings. A sibling who receives cash can move on; the remaining heir moves into the home, files the BOE-19-P, and locks in the low assessed value. The challenge is that the buying-out heir often does not have the cash for the buyout.

An equalization or beneficiary buyout loan, secured by the trust or estate property, provides the funds needed to complete the buyout. The remaining heir borrows enough to pay the departing siblings their share, moves into the home, and preserves the Prop 19 exclusion. The loan is repaid over time or refinanced once title is in the heir's name.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Prop 19 apply to transfers that happened before February 16, 2021?
No. Transfers completed before February 16, 2021 fall under the old Prop 58 rules. The effective date for Prop 19 is strictly February 16, 2021. Any transfer that recorded before that date is governed by the prior exclusion rules.
What if the parent is still alive? Does Prop 19 apply to gifts during life?
Yes. Prop 19 applies to any parent-to-child transfer of real property, whether by gift during life or by inheritance at death. The rules and requirements are the same regardless of when the transfer occurs.
Can grandchildren qualify for the Prop 19 exclusion?
Under Prop 58, a grandparent-to-grandchild exclusion was available if the parent was deceased. Prop 19 narrowed this significantly. The grandparent-to-grandchild exclusion now exists only if both parents of the grandchild are deceased and the grandchild intends to use the property as their primary residence. Consult a California attorney for specifics.

Need a Buyout Loan to Preserve the Exclusion?

Call North Coast Financial at 760-722-2991. We fund Prop 19 equalization loans throughout California, often in 7 to 10 business days.