Re: Fun Under the Water:
My question for you is: how new is your development? If it didn't exist even prior to 2005, it is likely that everyone in it has a high tax rate because they all just bought.
Or worse, they bought at the peak and now they're paying based on bubble valuations.
As a note - what a lot of people don't know is that Proposition 13 - and I'd bet most of its relatives in other states - doesn't just cap increases in property tax rates. It also preserves the 'maximum value' - i.e. even should you successfully petition to get a property valuation reduced, futures increases back to the former value are not affected by the increase cap.
If you believe in the residential real estate life cycle: i.e. rented apartment, to condo, to starter home, to family home, to empty nester condo - then anything which stops people from going through this cycle affects supply - both from the property and from the money recycling.
In the California Bay Area, I know a significant number of people who will never move from their existing home because a move would actually cost them much more money than the relative house price change.
Their existing property taxes are so low that just moving to an identical house next door would raise their monthly bills by $1000 or more. So instead they keep adding on rooms and levels. The result is what I call the suburban ghetto: a friend's house in Huntington Beach has a neighbor who has built out their original 2 bedroom/1 bathroom house into a 6 bedroom, 3 bathroom monstrosity that touches 3 of the 4 property lines of that plot.
Yet the property tax paid by this monster is 1/5th that of my friend's other neighbor: a person who bought the house on the other side which is the original 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom ranch home for $650,000 in 2007.
Originally posted by HCS
Or worse, they bought at the peak and now they're paying based on bubble valuations.
As a note - what a lot of people don't know is that Proposition 13 - and I'd bet most of its relatives in other states - doesn't just cap increases in property tax rates. It also preserves the 'maximum value' - i.e. even should you successfully petition to get a property valuation reduced, futures increases back to the former value are not affected by the increase cap.
Originally posted by HCS
In the California Bay Area, I know a significant number of people who will never move from their existing home because a move would actually cost them much more money than the relative house price change.
Their existing property taxes are so low that just moving to an identical house next door would raise their monthly bills by $1000 or more. So instead they keep adding on rooms and levels. The result is what I call the suburban ghetto: a friend's house in Huntington Beach has a neighbor who has built out their original 2 bedroom/1 bathroom house into a 6 bedroom, 3 bathroom monstrosity that touches 3 of the 4 property lines of that plot.
Yet the property tax paid by this monster is 1/5th that of my friend's other neighbor: a person who bought the house on the other side which is the original 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom ranch home for $650,000 in 2007.
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