No. A transfer can be a sale or purchase, but it also can be a gift or inheritance. Transfers that constitute a change in ownership may occur by any means, including, but not limited to, transfers that are voluntary, involuntary, or occurs by operation of law; transfers by grant, gift, devise, inheritance, trust, contract of sale, addition or deletion of an owner, or property settlement. Payment or consideration for the property is not required.
Each county assessor's office reviews all recorded deeds for that county to determine which properties require reappraisal under the law. The county assessors may also discover changes in ownership through other means, such as taxpayer self-reporting, field inspections, review of building permits and newspapers. Once the county assessor has determined that a change in ownership has occurred, Proposition 13 requires the county assessor to reassess the property to its current fair market value as of the date ownership changed.
Since property taxes are based on the assessed value of a property at the time of acquisition, a current market value that is higher than the previously assessed Proposition 13 adjusted base year value will increase the property taxes. Conversely, if the current market value is lower than the previously assessed Proposition 13 adjusted base year value, then the property taxes on that property will decrease.
Only that portion of the property that changes ownership, however, is subject to reappraisal. For example, if 50 percent of the property is transferred, the assessor will reassess only 50 percent of the property at its current fair market value as of the date of the transfer, and deduct 50 percent from any existing Proposition 13 base year value. In most cases, when a person buys a residence, the entire property undergoes a change in ownership and 100 percent of the property is reassessed to its current market value.
If a transfer of real property results in the transfer of the present interest and beneficial use of the property, the value of which is substantially equal to the value of the fee interest, then such transfer would constitute a change in ownership unless a statutory exclusion applies. While a transfer of real property may constitute a change in ownership, the legislature has created a number of exclusions so that some types of transfers are excluded, by law, from the definition of change in ownership. Thus, for these types of transfers, the real property will not be reappraised.
An exclusion occurs when the assessor does not reassess a property because the property or portions of the property are automatically excluded from reassessment or is eligible to be excluded if the owner properly files a claim. The following list covers most changes in ownership that are excluded from reassessment, either automatically or by claim; however, there may be other excludable qualifying transactions not listed here. Thus, you should contact your local assessor or an attorney if you have a specific transaction that you would like to discuss.
Changes in ownership that require a claim to be filed to avoid reassessment include the following:
Changes in ownership that are automatically excluded from reassessment include the following:
No. A deed of reconveyance is only to officially document the fact that you paid off your loan. This is not a transaction that would cause a change in ownership simply because there is no transfer of beneficial use.
Yes. The county assessor will be required to reassess 50 percent of each property to current market value. This will result in 50 percent of each property maintaining its prior base year value and 50 percent of each property receiving a new base year value. The interests cannot be partitioned because the two condominiums are separate appraisal units.
Yes. In those cases where no deed is recorded, California law requires property owners to file a Change of Ownership Statement (COS) whenever real property or locally assessed manufactured homes change ownership. In those cases where a deed or other recorded documents are filed, the deeds and certain other recorded documents must be accompanied by a Preliminary Change of Ownership Report (PCOR) at the time of the recording; otherwise, the taxpayer may file the PCOR at another time, but the county recorder may charge a $20 fee for filing the PCOR without the accompanying documents. If the PCOR is not filed, or is improperly completed, the county assessor may mail you a COS. Failure to return the COS may result in penalties. These forms are used to assist in the appraisal of property and are not open for public inspection.
Yes. You and your sister are the sole remaining joint tenants, thus a change in ownership has occurred as to one-third of the property since your mom transferred of her one-third interest to you and your sister. However, if this transfer occurred between November 5, 1986 and February 15, 2021, this transaction may qualify to be excluded from a change in ownership under Proposition 58 (transfers between parents and their children), provided your mother has not already used the $1 million dollar limit allowed for investment property. If this transfer occurred on or after February 16, 2021, the transfer will be subject to reassessment because a commercial property does not qualify for the Proposition 19 intergenerational transfer exclusion, which applies only to the transfer of a family home or family farm.
No. Adding joint tenants does not result in reappraisal so long as you, as the original joint tenant, remain as one of the joint tenants. As a result of this exclusion, you become an "original transferor." Once you no longer have an interest in the property, at that time, the entire property would be reappraised. However, adding someone to title as tenants-in-common is a change in ownership, unless an exclusion applies.
You may qualify for the cotenancy exclusion if you file an affidavit with the county assessor when your brother dies. As long as both you and your brother together own 100 percent of the property and, for the one-year period prior to the date of death, both of you were on title and continuously resided in the property, the surviving cotenant will qualify for the cotenancy exclusion.
Yes. If you are registered with the California Secretary of State, transfers ofreal property between registered domestic partners are excluded from reassessment.
Yes. The following lease transactions are considered changes in ownership:
Section 480 of the Revenue and Taxation Code requires the buyer of any real property subject to local property taxation that has changed ownership to file a change in ownership report according to the following time schedule:
If the statement is filed at the time of recording, the owner may file a Preliminary Change in Ownership Report (PCOR), BOE 502-A. If a PCOR is not filed at the time of recording, the owner must file a Change in Ownership Statement, BOE-502-AH, within the specified time period.
These forms and various other change in ownership reporting forms may be available from your county assessor's website, or you may call their office to request that a form be sent to you.
Ordinarily, when sales or transfers of property are recorded with the county recorder, a Preliminary Change of Ownership Report (PCOR) is also filed. The PCOR is a two-page questionnaire requesting transfer information on the property; possible exclusions from reassessment; principals involved in the transfer; type of transfer; purchase price and terms of sale, if applicable; and other such pertinent data.
The PCOR normally satisfies the change in ownership reporting requirements, unless the form is returned incomplete. If at the time of recording the transferee chooses not to file a PCOR, or if the transfer deed is not recorded, the transferee is still obligated to file a Change in Ownership Statement (COS) with the county assessor within the prescribed time limits. The recorder may charge an additional $20 recording fee if a PCOR is not filed at the time the transfer document is presented to be recorded.
The PCOR is to be signed and certified by the transferee. The county assessor may also request other information about a deed, or other matters related to the transfer, after reviewing the PCOR.
A COS is typically sent out by the county assessor to the transferee when a PCOR is either not filed or is incomplete at the time the transfer is recorded. The COS contains the same questions as those in a PCOR. The county assessor may also send a COS to transferees of unique or specialized-type properties when they change ownership.
Per section 482 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, if you fail to notify the county assessor of a change in ownership, such failure to report will result in the assessment of penalties and interest and may also result in penalties associated with any escape assessments. The penalty for failure to file a Change in Ownership Statement upon a written request by the assessor is $100 or 10 percent of the new base year value resulting from the transfer, whichever is greater, but such penalty may not exceed $5,000 if the property is eligible for the homeowners' exemption or $20,000 if the property is not eligible for the homeowners' exemption, unless the failure to file was willful.
Per section 532(b)(2) of the Revenue and Taxation Code, the county assessor must retroactively assess as many as eight prior assessment rolls if the escape assessment was the result of the failure to file a required Change in Ownership Statement. For legal entities, there is no limitation as to the number of years the county assessor may make an escape assessment.
No. A penalty is triggered only by the county assessor's request to file the Change of Ownership Statement.
If you still have questions about changes in ownership, you may call the Board's Assessment Services Unit at 916-274-3350.