2026 Tax Year · Updated January 2026

California Property Tax Calculator: Prop 13 + County Rates 2026

Calculate California property tax with the Prop 13 base 1% rate plus county-specific bonds and Mello-Roos. Includes all 58 counties, homeowners' exemption, and supplemental tax estimates. CPA-reviewed.

Reviewed by Benjamin Thomas, CPA, MST
Updated January 2026
Source: CA BOE, County Assessors

Property Information

Step 01
For new buyers, this equals purchase price. Long-term owners use county assessor's value.
Effective rates include voter-approved bonds and assessments above the 1% Prop 13 base
Special assessment districts in newer developments. Check your county assessor's records.
Affects available exemptions
Prop 13 caps assessment growth at 2% per year. Enter 0 for new purchases.

Annual Property Tax

Step 02
Annual Property Tax
$0
at 0.000% effective rate
Monthly
$0
Per Pay (bi-weekly)
$0
Assessed Value$0
Less: Homeowners' Exemption−$0
Taxable Value$0
Tax Components
Prop 13 Base Rate (1.00%)$0
County Bonds & Assessments (0.00%)$0
Total Annual Tax$0
BT
Senior Associate at Forvis Mazars US · 15+ years finance experience
Last reviewed: January 15, 2026

How California Property Tax Works (Proposition 13)

California's property tax system is unique due to Proposition 13, passed by voters in 1978. This constitutional amendment fundamentally restructured property taxation:

However, the actual rate paid is typically 1.10%–1.35% for new buyers because of voter-approved local bonds (schools, infrastructure) and special assessments added on top of the 1% base.

"California's average property tax rate looks low (~0.75%) but this is misleading. New buyers in 2026 typically pay 1.15%–1.35% effective rate. Long-term owners with Prop 13 protection might pay 0.30%—a $9,000+/year difference on identical homes."

California Property Tax Rates by County (2026 Estimates)

CountyEffective RateNotes
Riverside County1.30%Mello-Roos common in new developments
San Bernardino County1.25%Inland Empire infrastructure bonds
Los Angeles County1.25%School and Metro bonds
Santa Clara County1.21%Silicon Valley infrastructure
Alameda County1.20%BART and school bonds
Contra Costa County1.19%Multiple school districts
San Diego County1.18%Some Mello-Roos zones
San Francisco County1.18%City + County combined
Sacramento County1.15%Capital region bonds
Orange County1.10%Lower bond burden
San Mateo County1.10%Bay Area, lower bonds
Marin County1.10%Lower density, fewer bonds

Mello-Roos: The Hidden California Property Tax

Mello-Roos Community Facilities Districts (CFDs) are special tax districts that fund infrastructure in newer developments. They were enacted by the 1982 Mello-Roos Act to help builders fund public improvements (schools, parks, sewers) that Prop 13 made impossible to finance through regular property tax.

Where Mello-Roos is Most Common

How Much Mello-Roos Costs

Mello-Roos can range from $500/year to $5,000+/year depending on the district. They're typically a fixed annual amount (not a percentage of value) and last 25–40 years until bonds are paid off. Always check the property's Mello-Roos status before buying — it's disclosed on the Natural Hazard Disclosure Statement.

Prop 13 Examples: Long-Term Owner vs New Buyer

The biggest impact of Prop 13 is the disparity between long-term owners and new buyers of identical properties:

ScenarioAssessed ValueAnnual Tax
Bought 1990 for $200K (35 years)~$398,000~$4,975
Bought 2005 for $450K (20 years)~$668,000~$8,350
Bought 2015 for $700K (10 years)~$854,000~$10,675
Bought 2026 for $1,200,000 (new)$1,200,000~$15,000

All four homeowners could own identical homes worth $1.2M today. The 1990 buyer pays $10,000+/year less than the 2026 buyer — a Prop 13 protection worth ~$300,000 over 30 years.

Key California Property Tax Exemptions

Homeowners' Exemption ($7,000)

Reduces assessed value by $7,000 for owner-occupied primary residences. Saves about $70-$100/year. One-time application required with county assessor (Form BOE-266). Many homeowners forget to file this — easy money left on the table.

Disabled Veteran Exemption

Up to $169,769 exemption (2026 amount, indexed annually) for 100% disabled veterans. Up to $254,656 for low-income disabled veterans. Significant tax savings—often eliminates property tax entirely for qualifying veterans.

Senior Property Tax Postponement

California allows seniors (62+) with limited income to postpone property tax payments, with the state placing a lien on the property. Annual interest accrues, but payments are deferred until the property is sold or transferred.

Proposition 19 Inheritance Rules (2021)

Limits parent-child property tax transfers. Inherited primary residence keeps Prop 13 base only if the heir moves in within 1 year. Inherited rental properties get reassessed to market value. This was a major change from previous unlimited parent-child exclusions.

When Your Property Gets Reassessed

Prop 13 protection ends when ownership changes. Reassessment to market value happens upon:

Frequently Asked Questions

How is California property tax calculated under Prop 13?

Under Proposition 13 (1978), California property tax is 1% of the assessed value, plus voter-approved local bonds and special assessments (typically 0.1%-0.35%). The assessed value is set at the purchase price when you buy and can only increase by 2% per year (or CPI, whichever is lower) until the property is sold. Effective rates for new buyers in 2026 typically range from 1.10% to 1.35%.

What is Mello-Roos in California?

Mello-Roos (CFD - Community Facilities Districts) are special tax districts that fund infrastructure (schools, parks, roads, sewers) in newer developments, particularly in Riverside, San Bernardino, and parts of Orange and San Diego counties. These can add 0.50%-1.50% on top of standard property tax, pushing total rates to 2%+ in some new master-planned communities.

How does Prop 13 affect long-term homeowners?

Prop 13 caps annual assessed value increases at 2% per year. A homeowner who bought in 1990 for $200,000 has an assessed value of approximately $345,000 today (2% compounded over 35 years), even if the home is now worth $1.2M. This homeowner pays roughly $3,800/year in base tax versus $13,200/year a new buyer of the same home would pay—a $9,400/year savings.

What is the California Homeowners' Exemption?

California offers a Homeowners' Exemption that reduces the assessed value of an owner-occupied home by $7,000, saving approximately $70-$100 per year in property tax. The exemption requires a one-time application with your county assessor (Form BOE-266). It's small but cumulative—file once and benefit every year.

Sources & Methodology

Calculator methodology and county rates reviewed by Benjamin Thomas, CPA, MST. Rates verified against county assessor publications dated January 2026.

Disclaimer: Property tax rates vary by exact location within counties and can include city-specific bonds not reflected here. Mello-Roos amounts vary widely by development. This calculator provides estimates; for exact figures, contact your county assessor or check property records. Long-term Prop 13 protections require careful planning around transfers and inheritance—consult a CPA or estate attorney for significant decisions. MoneyMetricLab is not responsible for actions taken based on these estimates.