Comic style thumbnail, 9:16 vertical  Left side shows a terrified elderly woman and her adult son staring at a property tax bill jumping from "$2,800" crossed out to "$20,000" in red  A red arrow labeled "500% HIKE!" points upward  Right side shows a smug county assessor counting money next to a burning "FAMILY HOME" sign  Background features a superhero lawyer in a suit and cape flying in, holding a rolled document labeled "TRUST" and a shield with "ยง63 2"  Foreground comic burst reads: "THE PROPOSITION 19 TAX TRAP โ€“ KNOW YOUR RIGHTS!" Bottom banner: "HIRE A PROP 19 PROPERTY TAX LAWYER " Bold primary colors, heavy black ink lines, halftone shadows, dramatic action angles  Humorous, infuriating tone

She added her son to the deed. The county added $16,000 to her tax bill. ๐Ÿ˜ฑ This comic tells the (hypothetical) story of a San Diego widow who triggered a 500% property tax hike under Proposition 19 โ€“ just by trying to keep the family home in the family. The twist? An old trust and a missed filing deadline turned her $2,800 tax bill into nearly $20,000. Know your rights. File BOE-19-P on time. And never add a child to a deed without talking to a Prop 19 property tax lawyer first.


Prop 19 Property Tax Lawyer: Saving the Family Home in California (California Revenue & Taxation Code ยง 63.2)

Prop 19 property tax lawyer explains the 1-year rule, exclusion cap, and trust strategies. Save the family home from 500% tax hikes. Serving all California.

“Key Takeaways”

  • The One-Year Double Requirement: Under Revenue & Taxation Code ยง 63.2(a)(1), within one year of transfer, you must (1) move into the home as your primary residence AND (2) file a Homeowner’s Exemption (BOE-266) with the county assessor. Missing the filing deadline may still be fixable with a timely supplemental claimโ€”but do not delay.
  • The $1,044,586 Cap (2026): The exclusion protects the parent’s assessed value plus $1,044,586. Any market value above that cap gets reassessed. This amount is biennially adjusted by the State Board of Equalization.
  • The LLC “Workaround” Is a Trap: Transferring a primary residence into an LLC typically disqualifies the property from the parent-child exclusion. A legal entity cannot have a “principal residence” under California property tax law. Do not fall for this risky strategy.
  • Living Trusts Preserve Both Tax Benefits: Unlike QPRTs (which involve a completed gift and often lose the stepped-up basis), a properly funded living trust preserves both Prop 19 property tax benefits AND capital gains protection. View our affordable California living trust package โ†’
  • San Diego’s Three-Year Window: Missed the one-year filing deadline? San Diego County allows late filing within three yearsโ€”but the exclusion applies only prospectively. Act now before the window closes.

Full Pillar Page

Saving the Family Home: How a Prop 19 Property Tax Lawyer Can Help You Transfer California Real Estate Without a 500% Property Tax Hike

Quick Answer: Before Proposition 19, children inherited their parents’ low property tax basis automatically. Now, they face reassessment at current market value unless they move into the home within one year AND file a Homeowner’s Exemption with the county assessor. Even then, only the first $1,044,586 above the parent’s assessed value is protected. Without planning, a home purchased for $200,000 now worth $2 million could see property taxes jump from $3,000 to $20,000+ annually.

For generations of Californians, the family home has been the cornerstone of generational wealth. Over the next decade, Gen X and Millennials stand to inherit trillions in real estate from their Baby Boomer parents. But Proposition 19, passed in November 2020 and effective February 16, 2021, fundamentally changed the rules for parent-to-child property transfers.

At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp., we see California families making the same costly mistakes every week. This guide reveals the exact deadlines, filing requirements, legal strategies, and local procedures that separate families who keep their homes from those who are forced to sell. We serve clients throughout Californiaโ€”from San Diego to San Francisco.

For more insights on effective legal strategies, visit Legal Champ and Legal Sage.


What Exactly Did Proposition 19 Change? (And Why It Hurts)

Quick Answer: Before Prop 19, children inherited parents’ property tax basis regardless of whether they lived in the home. After Prop 19, the exclusion applies only to primary residences. Even then, protection is capped at the parent’s assessed value plus $1,044,586. Rental properties, vacation homes, and second homes now face full reassessment with no exclusion.

Under former law (Propositions 58 and 193), parents could transfer their primary residence of unlimited value and up to $1 million of other property to children without triggering reassessment. This allowed families in California’s high-appreciation neighborhoodsโ€”La Jolla, Newport Beach, Palo Altoโ€”to keep property taxes low even as home values skyrocketed.

Proposition 19 eliminated that broad exclusion. Under Revenue & Taxation Code ยง 63.2, the parent-child exclusion now applies only to a primary residence that the child occupies as their own principal residence. Additionally, the previous $1 million exclusion for other property types has been completely eliminated.

Comparison: Before vs. After Prop 19

ScenarioBefore Prop 19 (Prop 58/193)After Prop 19 (Current Law)
Primary residence transferUnlimited value exclusionCapped at assessed value + $1,044,586
Child must live in homeNo requirementYes, within 1 year AND file Homeowner’s Exemption
Rental property transferUp to $1M assessed value exclusionFull reassessment at market value
Vacation home transferUp to $1M assessed value exclusionFull reassessment at market value
Filing deadline for exclusion claim3 years3 years (but Homeowner’s Exemption required within 1 year)

Strategic Note: At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp., we begin every Prop 19 planning engagement by auditing the property’s current assessed value, fair market value, and whether the parent currently claims the Homeowner’s Exemption. These three data points determine whether any exclusion applies at all.


The 500% Tax Hike: A Real California Example

Quick Answer: A California home purchased for $200,000 in 1990, now worth $2 million, would see property taxes jump from approximately $4,000 to $20,000+ annually if the child doesn’t qualify for the exclusion. That’s a 500%+ increaseโ€”often enough to force a sale.

Let’s walk through a real-world example using current 2026 figures.

Scenario: A parent purchased their home in 1990 for $200,000. Under Proposition 13, the assessed value has increased approximately 2% annually, now sitting at roughly $400,000. The current fair market value is $2,000,000. The child inherits the home but does not move in.

Calculation StepAmount
Parent’s current assessed value$400,000
Fair market value at inheritance$2,000,000
Difference (value subject to reassessment)$1,600,000
Annual property tax before reassessment (1% of $400,000)$4,000
Annual property tax after full reassessment (1% of $2,000,000)$20,000
Annual tax increase$16,000 (400% increase)

If the child moves in AND files the Homeowner’s Exemption within one year, the calculation changes favorably:

Calculation StepAmount
Parent’s assessed value$400,000
2026 inflation-adjusted exclusion cap$1,044,586
Total protected value$1,444,586
Fair market value excess ($2,000,000 – $1,444,586)$555,414 (reassessed)
New assessed value ($400,000 + $555,414)$955,414
New annual property tax (1% of $955,414)$9,554
Annual tax increase$5,554 (still a 139% increase)

Important Note on Total Tax Bills: The 1% ad valorem tax is only part of your property tax bill. In many California communities, direct assessmentsโ€”Mello-Roos, bond measures, and sewer feesโ€”make up an additional 15-30% of the total bill. While these fixed charges don’t increase with reassessment, the overall out-of-pocket impact remains painful.

Strategic Note: This example reveals the hard truth. Even with perfect compliance, the child still faces a substantial tax increase. The only way to completely avoid reassessment is if the home’s fair market value falls below the parent’s assessed value plus the exclusion cap. In high-appreciation California neighborhoods, that’s increasingly rare.

Explore related resources at Buy a Trust and LBAT Law.


The One-Year Rule: Residency AND Filing (What Most Families Get Wrong)

Quick Answer: To qualify for the Prop 19 exclusion, you must do two things within one year of the transfer or parent’s death: (1) physically occupy the home as your primary residence, AND (2) file a Homeowner’s Exemption (BOE-266) with the county assessor. Under RTC ยง63.2(a)(1)(C)(ii), if you miss the filing deadline but file a timely supplemental claim, the exclusion may still be granted retroactivelyโ€”but this is not guaranteed.

This is the single most common mistake we see at Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. Families move into the inherited home within one year but never file the Homeowner’s Exemption. They assume living there is enough. It is not.

Under San Diego County Assessor’s Office guidelines, the Homeowner’s Exemption must be filed within one year of the transfer date or date of death. The Parent-Child Exclusion claim form (BOE-19-P) must also be filed, but that has a three-year window.

The Two-Clock Breakdown:

RequirementDeadlineFiling LocationConsequence of Miss
Move into home as primary residence1 year from transferN/A (physical occupancy)Disqualification from exclusion
File Homeowner’s Exemption (BOE-266)1 year from transferCounty AssessorReassessment for missed years (may be fixable with supplemental claim)
File Parent-Child Exclusion (BOE-19-P)3 years from transferCounty AssessorExclusion denied entirely

What Happens If You Miss the One-Year Filing Deadline?

If the Homeowner’s Exemption is not filed within one year, the property will be reassessed at current market value for the year(s) you did not file. You will receive an additional property tax bill. The reassessment for that period will not be reversed even if the Parent-Child Exclusion is later granted.

Is There Any Late Filing Relief?

Limited relief existsโ€”but it does not undo the reassessment for the missed period. Under RTC ยง63.2(a)(1)(C)(ii), if you file a timely supplemental claim for the Homeowner’s Exemption, the exclusion may be granted retroactively as long as residency was established. However, this is a complex legal process, and success is not guaranteed. If you continue to own and live in the property, and file both the Homeowner’s Exemption and the Parent-Child Exclusion within three years of the parent’s death, the exclusion may still be granted going forward. Nevertheless, the property taxes assessed for the missed year(s) must still be paid.

There is no waiver for not knowing the rule. Unfortunately, many families miss the deadline simply because they did not realize a separate Homeowner’s Exemption form had to be filed. However, the law does not provide an exception for confusion, oversight, or administrative delay.

Strategic Note: At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp., we send every client a calendar with both deadlines highlighted. We also file the Homeowner’s Exemption on their behalf to eliminate the risk of administrative error.


How the Partial Reassessment Calculation Works (With 2026 Numbers)

Quick Answer: When the child qualifies for the exclusion, the new assessed value equals the parent’s assessed value PLUS the excess of fair market value over the protected cap. The protected cap equals the parent’s assessed value plus $1,044,586 (the 2026 inflation-adjusted exclusion). Only the excess above that cap gets reassessed.

The calculation follows a defined sequence under Revenue & Taxation Code ยง 63.2:

  1. Identify the parent’s assessed value immediately before death
  2. Add the applicable adjusted exclusion amount ($1,044,586 for 2026)
  3. Compare the total protected cap to the property’s fair market value at death

If the fair market value is less than or equal to the protected cap, no reassessment occurs. If the fair market value exceeds the protected cap, only the excess is reassessed.

Step-by-Step Calculation Example (2026):

Assume the following facts:

  • Parent assessed value: $200,000
  • Fair market value at death: $1,600,000
  • Adjusted exclusion amount (2026): $1,044,586

The protected cap equals $1,244,586 ($200,000 + $1,044,586). The excess value of $355,414 ($1,600,000 – $1,244,586) is reassessed. The new assessed value becomes $555,414 ($200,000 + $355,414)โ€”not the full market value, but substantially higher than the original assessment.

2026 Threshold Note: The California State Board of Equalization published an inflation-adjusted exclusion threshold of $1,044,586 for transfers occurring between February 16, 2025 and February 15, 2027. This is a 2.15% increase over the previous $1,022,600 amount.

Strategic Note: County assessors apply Proposition 19 rules strictly. Residency documentation is critical and frequently reviewed. Older trusts drafted before Proposition 19 often require revision. We advise clients to gather utility bills, voter registration, driver’s license, and tax returns showing the inherited address as primary residence.


The LLC “Workaround” Is a Trap (Do Not Fall for It)

Quick Answer: Transferring a primary residence into an LLC typically disqualifies the property from the parent-child exclusion entirely. A legal entity cannot have a “principal residence” in the eyes of the California Board of Equalization. The LLC strategy, if it works at all, applies only to commercial or rental propertiesโ€”and Prop 19 eliminated the exclusion for those entirely.

Some online articles suggest using an LLC to avoid Prop 19 reassessment. This advice is dangerously misleading for California families trying to protect their primary residence.

Why the LLC Strategy Fails for Primary Residences:

Under Revenue & Taxation Code ยง64(c), property held by a legal entity like an LLC is reassessed when one person obtains control (more than 50% ownership). Some have argued that by structuring an LLC with no single person holding more than 50%, reassessment can be avoided.

Here is the critical flaw: the Prop 19 parent-child exclusion applies only to a “principal residence” of an individual. A legal entityโ€”including an LLCโ€”cannot have a principal residence. As one legal analysis notes, “The parent-child exclusion rules discussed do not apply to properties held in legal entities such as limited liability companies, partnerships, and corporations.”

Consequently, transferring a family home into an LLC will likely trigger an immediate reassessment because the property is no longer held by an individual as a principal residence.

The Only Potential Use Case (Not for Primary Residences):

For commercial, industrial, or residential rental properties, the LLC strategy might have theoretical valueโ€”but Prop 19 completely eliminated the exclusion for “other real property” (non-primary residences). Even if the LLC structure avoided reassessment under RTC ยง64(c), the property would still face reassessment upon transfer because it does not qualify for the parent-child exclusion at all.

Strategic Note: At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp., we never recommend LLCs for family homes under Prop 19. The risk of immediate reassessment far outweighs any potential benefit. Instead, we focus on properly structured living trusts and timely filing strategies.


QPRT vs. Living Trust: What Actually Works Under Prop 19

Quick Answer: A Qualified Personal Residence Trust (QPRT) is an estate tax tool, not a Prop 19 solution. Because a QPRT involves a completed gift for tax purposes, heirs generally do NOT receive a stepped-up basis at the parent’s death. A properly funded living trust preserves the stepped-up basis while allowing Prop 19 compliance. View our affordable California living trust package โ†’

Some estate planning articles recommend QPRTs as a Prop 19 strategy. This advice misunderstands how both QPRTs and Prop 19 actually work.

What a QPRT Actually Does:

A Qualified Personal Residence Trust allows you to transfer your primary residence to a trust while retaining the right to live there for a specified period (typically 10-15 years). After this period, the property passes to your beneficiaries. This can reduce estate taxes by removing the home’s value from your taxable estate.

Why a QPRT Fails for Prop 19 Purposes:

  1. The transfer occurs when the retained term ends. Under Prop 19, the parent-child exclusion applies only if the child occupies the home as their primary residence within one year of transfer. If the child does not move in at the exact moment the QPRT term ends, reassessment triggers.
  2. Heirs lose the stepped-up basis. Because a QPRT involves a completed gift for tax purposes, the heirs generally do NOT receive a stepped-up cost basis at the parent’s death. This means they could face massive capital gains taxes upon saleโ€”the very trap the article claims to avoid.
  3. Property held in a QPRT that has not yet terminated is not protected from Prop 19.

What Actually Works: A Properly Funded Living Trust

A revocable living trust provides probate avoidance, step-up in cost basis at death, controlled timing of distribution, asset protection planning, and better coordination with Prop 19 rules.

Comparison Table: Living Trust vs. QPRT vs. Lifetime Gifting

FactorLiving TrustQPRTLifetime Gift
Prop 19 exclusion eligibilityYes (if child occupies)Unclear (transfer at term end)Yes (but triggers reassessment)
Step-up in basis at deathYes (full step-up)No (completed gift)No
Capital gains tax on salePotentially zeroPotentially massivePotentially massive
Estate tax reductionNoYes (if structured correctly)Yes (but uses lifetime exemption)
ComplexityLowHighLow
Best forMost California familiesHigh-net-worth estates onlySmall-value homes only

Strategic Note: At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp., we rarely recommend QPRTs for Prop 19 planning. Instead, we help clients establish properly funded living trusts that preserve both property tax benefits AND capital gains protection. Our affordable California living trust package starts at $800 for a single person.


San Diego County Filing Procedures (Step-by-Step)

Quick Answer: To claim the parent-child exclusion in San Diego County, you must file three documents with the Assessor-Recorder-Clerk’s Office: (1) Homeowner’s Exemption (BOE-266) within one year, (2) Parent-Child Exclusion Claim (BOE-19-P) within three years, and (3) a copy of the death certificate or transfer deed. All filings go to 1600 Pacific Highway, Room 103, San Diego, CA 92101.

San Diego County Assessor-Recorder-Clerk’s Office

Address: 1600 Pacific Highway, Room 103, San Diego, CA 92101
Phone: (619) 236-3771
Website: https://www.sdarcc.gov/

Step-by-Step Filing Instructions:

1 โ€“ Gather Required Documents:

  • Copy of death certificate (if transfer occurred upon death)
  • Copy of recorded deed or trust document showing transfer
  • Parent’s name and assessed property tax information
  • Child’s new driver’s license showing inherited property address
  • Utility bills or voter registration showing occupancy

2 โ€“ File Homeowner’s Exemption (BOE-266):

  • Deadline: Within 1 year of transfer or death
  • Form available at: https://www.sdarcc.gov/
  • Filing method: Mail or in-person delivery
  • Note: If you miss the deadline, file a supplemental claim immediately

3 โ€“ File Parent-Child Exclusion Claim (BOE19-P):

  • Deadline: Within 3 years of transfer or before property transfers to third party
  • Form available at: https://www.boe.ca.gov/prop19/
  • Filing method: Mail or in-person delivery

4 โ€“ Record the Deed (If Not Already Recorded):

  • The Recorder’s Office charges recording fees (typically $20-$50)
  • A Preliminary Change of Ownership Report (PCOR) must accompany the deed
  • PCOR fee: approximately $20 (payable to the Recorder’s Office)

5 โ€“ Confirm Receipt:

  • San Diego County Assessor will send a determination letter
  • Processing time: 3-6 months
  • If denied, you have 60 days to appeal to the Assessment Appeals Board

Important Note: The Homeowner’s Exemption (BOE-266) and the Prop 19 reassessment-exclusion claim (BOE-19-P) are distinct. Filing one does not substitute for the other. This is a common procedural error.

Strategic Note: At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp., we handle all three filings for our clients. We also provide a post-filing confirmation service to ensure the Assessor’s Office properly processes both claims. We serve clients throughout California, not just San Diego County.


Quick Answer: Two recent developments affect Prop 19 planning. First, the inflation-adjusted exclusion increased to $1,044,586 for 2026. Second, SCA 4 (pending) proposes to restore some parent-child exclusions. If passed, it could partially roll back Prop 19’s most aggressive provisions.

2026 Inflation Adjustment:

The California State Board of Equalization published an inflation-adjusted exclusion threshold of $1,044,586 for transfers occurring between February 16, 2025 and February 15, 2027. This represents an increase of 2.15% over the previous $1,022,600 amount.

SCA 4: Protecting Taxpayers’ Rights (Pending 2026):

SCA 4 is a proposed constitutional amendment that would allow voters to reinstate Proposition 58 (1986) and Proposition 193 (1996), restoring protections for families to keep their childhood homes when parents or grandparents pass away.

What SCA 4 Would Change (If Passed):

  • Allows transfers to children (or grandchildren if parents are deceased) without property tax reassessment of principal residence regardless of its current value or continued use as principal residence
  • Protects $1 million in other real property from reassessment

Status as of April 2026: SCA 4 has not been enacted. It failed to pass a Senate committee vote in 2023 but remains a subject of legislative discussion. At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp., we track this legislation weekly and will advise clients as soon as it passes.

Strategic Note: While SCA 4 offers hope for partial relief, we advise clients not to wait. Assume Prop 19 remains in its current form for planning purposes. If SCA 4 passes, we will adjust strategies accordingly.


The 30-Day Prop 19 Action Plan for California Families

Use this timeline to protect your inherited property or plan ahead for future transfers:

DayActionEstimated Tax Impact
1Determine parent’s current assessed value (check property tax bill or contact county assessor)Baseline
2Calculate fair market value (use Zillow, Redfin, or appraisal)Determines exposure
3If transfer already occurred: Verify Homeowner’s Exemption filing statusPotentially saves $10,000+ annually
7File Homeowner’s Exemption (BOE-266) if not already filedCritical: one-year deadline
14File Parent-Child Exclusion Claim (BOE-19-P)Three-year deadline
21Gather residency documentation (driver’s license, voter registration, utility bills)Required for audit defense
30Consult with a Prop 19 property tax lawyer to revise trust documentsPrevents future reassessment

Strategic Note: At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp., we provide a free 30-minute Prop 19 audit for any California family who has inherited property in the last three years. We identify missed deadlines, file missing forms, and calculate potential tax exposure. Consequently, our clients save an average of $8,000 annually in property taxes.

Learn more about effective legal planning at Demand Letter on Demand and Immigration LBAT Law.


Why You Need a Prop 19 Property Tax Lawyer

Quick Answer: Proposition 19 is one of the most complex changes to California property tax law in decades. The deadlines are unforgiving, the forms are confusing, and the penalties for mistakes are severe. A Prop 19 property tax lawyer can help you file the correct forms on time, structure your estate plan to preserve benefits, and appeal incorrect reassessments.

The stakes are enormous. A mistake under Prop 19 can cost your family tens of thousands of dollars annually in increased property taxesโ€”forever.

How a Prop 19 Property Tax Lawyer Can Help:

  • Timely Filing: We ensure all forms (BOE-266, BOE-19-P) are filed correctly and on time
  • Late Filing Relief: If you missed the deadline, we can help file supplemental claims and argue for retroactive relief
  • Estate Plan Review: We review and revise existing trusts to comply with Prop 19
  • Assessment Appeals: If the county assessor incorrectly reassesses your property, we handle the appeal
  • Trust Package: Our affordable California living trust package starts at $800 and is specifically designed for Prop 19 planning

Strategic Note: At Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp., we serve clients throughout California. Whether you live in San Diego, Los Angeles, Orange County, or the Bay Area, we can help you navigate Proposition 19 and protect your family home.


FAQ Section

What is the one-year rule under Proposition 19?

Under Revenue & Taxation Code ยง 63.2, the child must move into the inherited home as their primary residence within one year of the transfer or parent’s death. Additionally, they must file a Homeowner’s Exemption (BOE-266) with the county assessor within that same one-year window. Missing either can trigger reassessment, though late filing relief may be available in some circumstances.

What is the 2026 exclusion cap for Prop 19?

The California State Board of Equalization set the inflation-adjusted exclusion cap at $1,044,586 for transfers occurring between February 16, 2025 and February 15, 2027. The new assessed value equals the parent’s assessed value plus the fair market value exceeding that cap. This is a 2.15% increase over the previous $1,022,600 amount.

Does Prop 19 apply to rental properties or vacation homes?

Yes, but the exclusion does not apply. Under Prop 19, rental properties, vacation homes, and second homes no longer qualify for parent-child exclusion. These properties face full reassessment at current market value upon transfer, regardless of whether the child uses them.

Can I use an LLC to avoid Prop 19 reassessment?

No, this is a dangerous strategy for primary residences. The parent-child exclusion rules do not apply to properties held in legal entities such as LLCs, partnerships, or corporations. A legal entity cannot have a “principal residence,” so transferring a family home into an LLC typically triggers immediate reassessment.

What is a QPRT and does it help with Prop 19?

A Qualified Personal Residence Trust (QPRT) is an estate tax reduction tool, not a Prop 19 solution. It involves a completed gift, so heirs generally do not receive a stepped-up basis. For Prop 19 purposes, a properly funded living trust is usually a better option.

What happens if I miss the one-year filing deadline?

The property will be reassessed at current market value for the missed year(s), and you will receive an additional property tax bill. Under RTC ยง63.2(a)(1)(C)(ii), if you file a timely supplemental claim, the exclusion may be granted retroactively as long as residency was established. However, success is not guaranteed.

Can I claim the parent-child exclusion while the parent is still alive?

Yes, but only in limited situations. The property must be the parent’s primary residence, and the child must make it their primary residence within one year of transfer. However, lifetime gifting loses the stepped-up basis at death, potentially triggering massive capital gains taxes upon sale.

How do I file for the parent-child exclusion in San Diego County?

File three documents with the San Diego County Assessor-Recorder-Clerk’s Office at 1600 Pacific Highway, Room 103: Homeowner’s Exemption (BOE-266) within one year, Parent-Child Exclusion Claim (BOE-19-P) within three years, and a copy of the death certificate or transfer deed. A PCOR fee of approximately $20 applies when recording the deed.

What is SCA 4 and will it repeal Prop 19?

SCA 4 is a pending California constitutional amendment that would restore some parent-child exclusions. If passed, it would allow transfers of principal residence without reassessment regardless of value and protect $1 million in other property. As of April 2026, it remains in legislative discussion after failing a committee vote in 2023.

Does Prop 19 affect trusts created before February 2021?

Yes. Older trusts drafted before Proposition 19 (pre-February 2021) often assumed the parent-child exclusion would apply automatically. These trusts typically require revision to comply with Prop 19’s new requirements. We advise all California families with pre-2021 trusts to schedule a review.

Contact Our Office

Ready to protect your family home from Prop 19’s tax trap?

Contact Leeran S. Barzilai, A Prof. Law Corp. for a free 30-minute Prop 19 audit. We’ll calculate your potential tax exposure, file missing forms, and revise outdated trusts. We serve clients throughout California.

Address: 4501 Mission Bay Dr. #3c, San Diego, CA 92109
Phone: (619) 436-7544
Email: info@lbatlaw.com
Website: https://lbatlaw.com/

View our affordable California living trust package โ†’

Evening and weekend appointments available. Virtual consultations offered statewide.

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Subpage 1: Prop 19 One-Year Rule Deadline Calculator

English

Top 3 Keywords: Prop 19 one-year rule, parent-child exclusion deadline, California property tax filing deadline
Meta Description: Calculate your exact Prop 19 filing deadline. California families have one year from transfer or death to file Homeowner’s Exemption.
Internal Link: https://lbatlaw.com/prop-19-property-tax-lawyer-san-diego
External Links: https://www.sdarcc.gov/parentchildexclusion/https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=RTC&sectionNum=63.2

Chinese (ไธญๆ–‡)

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Hebrew (ืขื‘ืจื™ืช)

ื›ื•ืชืจืช: ืžื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ืžื•ืขื“ ืฉื ืชื™ ืฉืœ ื”ืฆืขื” 19 โ€“ ืžื•ืขื“ ืื—ืจื•ืŸ ืœืคื˜ื•ืจ ืžืก ืจื›ื•ืฉ ื‘ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”
ืžื™ืœื•ืช ืžืคืชื—: ื›ืœืœ ื”ืฉื ื” ืฉืœ ื”ืฆืขื” 19, ืžื•ืขื“ ืื—ืจื•ืŸ ืœืคื˜ื•ืจ ื”ื•ืจื”-ื™ืœื“, ืžื•ืขื“ ื”ื’ืฉืช ืžืก ืจื›ื•ืฉ ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”
ืชื™ืื•ืจ: ื—ื™ืฉื•ื‘ ืžื•ืขื“ ื”ื”ื’ืฉื” ื”ืžื“ื•ื™ืง ืฉืœืš ืœืคื™ ื”ืฆืขื” 19. ืžืฉืคื—ื•ืช ื‘ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื” ืžื—ื•ื™ื‘ื•ืช ืœื”ื’ื™ืฉ ื‘ืงืฉื” ืœืคื˜ื•ืจ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืชื•ืš ืฉื ื” ืžื”ื”ืขื‘ืจื” ืื• ื”ืคื˜ื™ืจื”.


Subpage 2: California RTC ยง63.2 Explained

English

Top 3 Keywords: Revenue and Taxation Code 63.2, Prop 19 statutory text, parent-child exclusion California
Meta Description: Full explanation of California Revenue & Taxation Code ยง63.2, the statute implementing Proposition 19’s parent-child exclusion rules.
Internal Link: https://lbatlaw.com/prop-19-property-tax-lawyer-san-diego
External Links: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=RTC&sectionNum=63.2https://www.boe.ca.gov/prop19/

Chinese (ไธญๆ–‡)

ๆ ‡้ข˜: ๅŠ ๅทž็จŽๆ”ถไธŽ็จŽๆณ•็ฌฌ63.2ๆก่ฏฆ่งฃ โ€“ ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆไบฒๅญ่ฑๅ…
ๅ…ณ้”ฎ่ฏ: ็จŽๆ”ถไธŽ็จŽๆณ•็ฌฌ63.2ๆก, ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆๆณ•ๆกๆ–‡ๆœฌ, ๅŠ ๅทžไบฒๅญ่ฑๅ…
ๆ่ฟฐ: ๅ…จ้ข่งฃ่ฏปๅŠ ๅทž็จŽๆ”ถไธŽ็จŽๆณ•็ฌฌ63.2ๆก๏ผŒ่ฏฅๆณ•ๆกๆ‰ง่กŒ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆ็š„ไบฒๅญๆˆฟไบง็จŽ่ฑๅ…่ง„ๅˆ™ใ€‚

Hebrew (ืขื‘ืจื™ืช)

ื›ื•ืชืจืช: ื”ืกื‘ืจ ืขืœ ื—ื•ืง ื”ื”ื›ื ืกื•ืช ื•ื”ืžื™ืกื•ื™ ืฉืœ ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื” ยง63.2 โ€“ ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื”ื•ืจื”-ื™ืœื“ ื‘ื”ืฆืขื” 19
ืžื™ืœื•ืช ืžืคืชื—: ื—ื•ืง ื”ื”ื›ื ืกื•ืช ื•ื”ืžื™ืกื•ื™ 63.2, ื ื•ืกื— ื—ื•ืง ื”ืฆืขื” 19, ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื”ื•ืจื”-ื™ืœื“ ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”
ืชื™ืื•ืจ: ื”ืกื‘ืจ ืžืœื ืฉืœ ื—ื•ืง ื”ื”ื›ื ืกื•ืช ื•ื”ืžื™ืกื•ื™ ืฉืœ ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื” ยง63.2, ื”ื—ื•ืง ื”ืžื™ื™ืฉื ืืช ื›ืœืœื™ ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื”ื•ืจื”-ื™ืœื“ ืฉืœ ื”ืฆืขื” 19.


Subpage 3: BOE-266 Homeowner’s Exemption Filing Guide

English

Top 3 Keywords: BOE-266 form, Homeowner’s Exemption California, Prop 19 filing requirements
Meta Description: Step-by-step guide to filing BOE-266 Homeowner’s Exemption in California. One-year deadline. Required for Prop 19 exclusion.
Internal Link: https://lbatlaw.com/prop-19-property-tax-lawyer-san-diego
External Links: https://www.sdarcc.gov/https://www.boe.ca.gov/prop19/

Chinese (ไธญๆ–‡)

ๆ ‡้ข˜: BOE-266่‡ชไฝๅ…็จŽ็”ณ่ฏทๆŒ‡ๅ— โ€“ ๅŠ ๅทž็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆ็”ณๆŠฅ่ฆๆฑ‚
ๅ…ณ้”ฎ่ฏ: BOE-266่กจๆ ผ, ๅŠ ๅทž่‡ชไฝๅ…็จŽ, ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆ็”ณๆŠฅ่ฆๆฑ‚
ๆ่ฟฐ: ๅŠ ๅทžBOE-266่‡ชไฝๅ…็จŽๅˆ†ๆญฅ็”ณ่ฏทๆŒ‡ๅ—ใ€‚ไธ€ๅนดๆœŸ้™ใ€‚ๅ…่ดนใ€‚็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆ่ฑๅ…ๅฟ…้œ€ๆ–‡ไปถใ€‚

Hebrew (ืขื‘ืจื™ืช)

ื›ื•ืชืจืช: ืžื“ืจื™ืš ื”ื’ืฉืช BOE-266 ืœืคื˜ื•ืจ ื‘ืขืœื™ื โ€“ ื“ืจื™ืฉื•ืช ื”ื’ืฉื” ืœื”ืฆืขื” 19 ื‘ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”
ืžื™ืœื•ืช ืžืคืชื—: ื˜ื•ืคืก BOE-266, ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”, ื“ืจื™ืฉื•ืช ื”ื’ืฉื” ืœื”ืฆืขื” 19
ืชื™ืื•ืจ: ืžื“ืจื™ืš ืฉืœื‘ ืื—ืจ ืฉืœื‘ ืœื”ื’ืฉืช ื˜ื•ืคืก BOE-266 ืœืคื˜ื•ืจ ื‘ืขืœื™ื ื‘ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”. ืžื•ืขื“ ืื—ืจื•ืŸ ืฉืœ ืฉื ื”. ื ื“ืจืฉ ืœืคื˜ื•ืจ ื”ืฆืขื” 19.


Subpage 4: BOE-19-P Parent-Child Exclusion Claim Form

English

Top 3 Keywords: BOE-19-P form, parent-child exclusion claim, Prop 19 claim form California
Meta Description: Complete guide to filing BOE-19-P Parent-Child Exclusion Claim in California. Three-year deadline. Required for Prop 19 property tax protection.
Internal Link: https://lbatlaw.com/prop-19-property-tax-lawyer-san-diego
External Links: https://www.boe.ca.gov/prop19/https://www.sdarcc.gov/parentchildexclusion/

Chinese (ไธญๆ–‡)

ๆ ‡้ข˜: BOE-19-Pไบฒๅญ่ฑๅ…็”ณ่ฏท่กจ โ€“ ๅŠ ๅทž็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆ็”ณๆŠฅ
ๅ…ณ้”ฎ่ฏ: BOE-19-P่กจๆ ผ, ไบฒๅญ่ฑๅ…็”ณ่ฏท, ๅŠ ๅทž็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆ็”ณ่ฏท่กจ
ๆ่ฟฐ: ๅŠ ๅทžBOE-19-Pไบฒๅญ่ฑๅ…็”ณ่ฏทๅฎŒๆ•ดๆŒ‡ๅ—ใ€‚ไธ‰ๅนดๆœŸ้™ใ€‚็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆๆˆฟไบง็จŽไฟๆŠคๅฟ…้œ€ๆ–‡ไปถใ€‚

Hebrew (ืขื‘ืจื™ืช)

ื›ื•ืชืจืช: ื˜ื•ืคืก BOE-19-P ืœื‘ืงืฉืช ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื”ื•ืจื”-ื™ืœื“ โ€“ ื”ื’ืฉื” ืœื”ืฆืขื” 19 ื‘ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”
ืžื™ืœื•ืช ืžืคืชื—: ื˜ื•ืคืก BOE-19-P, ื‘ืงืฉืช ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื”ื•ืจื”-ื™ืœื“, ื˜ื•ืคืก ื”ืฆืขื” 19 ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”
ืชื™ืื•ืจ: ืžื“ืจื™ืš ืžืœื ืœื”ื’ืฉืช ื‘ืงืฉืช ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื”ื•ืจื”-ื™ืœื“ BOE-19-P ื‘ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”. ืžื•ืขื“ ืื—ืจื•ืŸ ืฉืœ ืฉืœื•ืฉ ืฉื ื™ื. ื ื“ืจืฉ ืœื”ื’ื ืช ืžืก ืจื›ื•ืฉ ืœืคื™ ื”ืฆืขื” 19.


Subpage 5: California Living Trust for Prop 19 Planning

English

Top 3 Keywords: living trust Prop 19, affordable California living trust, estate planning for property taxes
Meta Description: Affordable California living trust package ($800 flat fee) designed for Prop 19 compliance. Preserve property tax benefits AND stepped-up basis.
Internal Link: https://lbatlaw.com/prop-19-property-tax-lawyer-san-diego
External Links: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=PROB&sectionNum=10810https://www.boe.ca.gov/prop19/

Chinese (ไธญๆ–‡)

ๆ ‡้ข˜: ๅŠ ๅทž็”Ÿๅ‰ไฟกๆ‰˜ไธŽ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆ่ง„ๅˆ’ โ€“ ๆˆฟไบง็จŽไฟๆŠค
ๅ…ณ้”ฎ่ฏ: ็”Ÿๅ‰ไฟกๆ‰˜็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆ, ็ปๆตŽๅž‹ๅŠ ๅทž็”Ÿๅ‰ไฟกๆ‰˜, ๆˆฟไบง็จŽ้—ไบง่ง„ๅˆ’
ๆ่ฟฐ: ็ปๆตŽๅž‹ๅŠ ๅทž็”Ÿๅ‰ไฟกๆ‰˜ๅฅ—้ค๏ผˆ800็พŽๅ…ƒๅ›บๅฎš่ดน็”จ๏ผ‰๏ผŒไธ“ไธบ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆๅˆ่ง„่ฎพ่ฎกใ€‚ๅŒๆ—ถไฟๆŠคๆˆฟไบง็จŽไผ˜ๆƒ ๅ’Œ้€’ๅขž็จŽๅŸบใ€‚

Hebrew (ืขื‘ืจื™ืช)

ื›ื•ืชืจืช: ื ืืžื ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื ื‘ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื” ืœืชื›ื ื•ืŸ ื”ืฆืขื” 19 โ€“ ื”ื’ื ื” ืขืœ ืžืก ืจื›ื•ืฉ
ืžื™ืœื•ืช ืžืคืชื—: ื ืืžื ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื ื”ืฆืขื” 19, ื ืืžื ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื ืžืฉืชืœืžืช ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”, ืชื›ื ื•ืŸ ืขื™ื–ื‘ื•ืŸ ืœืžืก ืจื›ื•ืฉ
ืชื™ืื•ืจ: ื—ื‘ื™ืœืช ื ืืžื ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื ืžืฉืชืœืžืช ื‘ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื” ($800 ื‘ืžื—ื™ืจ ืฉื˜ื•ื—) ื”ืžื•ืชืืžืช ืœื”ืฆืขื” 19. ืฉืžื™ืจื” ืขืœ ื”ื˜ื‘ื•ืช ืžืก ืจื›ื•ืฉ ื•ื’ื ืขืœ ื‘ืกื™ืก ืžื•ื’ื“ืœ.


Subpage 6: SCA 4 California Property Tax Update 2026

English

Top 3 Keywords: SCA 4 California, Prop 19 repeal effort, parent-child exclusion restoration 2026
Meta Description: SCA 4 pending California constitutional amendment to restore Prop 19 parent-child exclusions. Status: In legislative discussion as of April 2026.
Internal Link: https://lbatlaw.com/prop-19-property-tax-lawyer-san-diego
External Links: https://sr32.senate.ca.gov/bill/sca-4-protecting-taxpayers-rightshttps://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml?bill_id=202520260SCA4

Chinese (ไธญๆ–‡)

ๆ ‡้ข˜: SCA 4 ๅŠ ๅทžๆˆฟไบง็จŽๆ›ดๆ–ฐ 2026 โ€“ ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆไฟฎ่ฎข
ๅ…ณ้”ฎ่ฏ: SCA 4 ๅŠ ๅทž, ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆๅบŸ้™คๅŠชๅŠ›, ไบฒๅญ่ฑๅ…ๆขๅค 2026
ๆ่ฟฐ: SCA 4 ๅพ…ๅ†ณๅŠ ๅทžๅฎชๆณ•ไฟฎๆญฃๆกˆ๏ผŒๆ—จๅœจๆขๅค็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆ็š„ไบฒๅญ่ฑๅ…ใ€‚ๆˆช่‡ณ2026ๅนด4ๆœˆ็Šถๆ€๏ผš็ซ‹ๆณ•่ฎจ่ฎบไธญใ€‚

Hebrew (ืขื‘ืจื™ืช)

ื›ื•ืชืจืช: SCA 4 ืขื“ื›ื•ืŸ ืžืก ืจื›ื•ืฉ ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื” 2026 โ€“ ืชื™ืงื•ืŸ ืœื”ืฆืขื” 19
ืžื™ืœื•ืช ืžืคืชื—: SCA 4 ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”, ืžืืžืฅ ื‘ื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื”ืฆืขื” 19, ืฉื—ื–ื•ืจ ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื”ื•ืจื”-ื™ืœื“ 2026
ืชื™ืื•ืจ: SCA 4 – ืชื™ืงื•ืŸ ื—ื•ืงืชื™ ื‘ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื” ื‘ื”ืžืชื ื” ืœืฉื™ืงื•ื ืคื˜ื•ืจื™ ื”ื•ืจื”-ื™ืœื“ ืœืคื™ ื”ืฆืขื” 19. ืกื˜ื˜ื•ืก ื ื›ื•ืŸ ืœืืคืจื™ืœ 2026: ื‘ื“ื™ื•ื ื™ื ื—ืงื™ืงืชื™ื™ื.


Subpage 7: Inherited Home Tax Increase Calculator California 2026

English

Top 3 Keywords: inherited property tax calculator, Prop 19 tax increase, California home inheritance tax 2026
Meta Description: Free calculator for Prop 19 property tax increase on inherited California homes. Enter assessed value, market value, and see your new tax bill.
Internal Link: https://lbatlaw.com/prop-19-property-tax-lawyer-san-diego
External Links: https://www.boe.ca.gov/prop19/https://www.sdarcc.gov/parentchildexclusion/

Chinese (ไธญๆ–‡)

ๆ ‡้ข˜: ๅŠ ๅทž็ปงๆ‰ฟๆˆฟไบง็จŽ่ฎก็ฎ—ๅ™จ 2026 โ€“ ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆๅขž็จŽ
ๅ…ณ้”ฎ่ฏ: ็ปงๆ‰ฟๆˆฟไบง็จŽ่ฎก็ฎ—ๅ™จ, ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆๅขž็จŽ, ๅŠ ๅทž็ปงๆ‰ฟๆˆฟไบง็จŽ 2026
ๆ่ฟฐ: ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆไธ‹ๅŠ ๅทž็ปงๆ‰ฟๆˆฟไบงๅขž็จŽๅ…่ดน่ฎก็ฎ—ๅ™จใ€‚่พ“ๅ…ฅ่ฏ„ไผฐไปทๅ€ผใ€ๅธ‚ๅœบไปทๅ€ผ๏ผŒ่ฎก็ฎ—ๆ‚จ็š„ๆ–ฐๆˆฟไบง็จŽ่ดฆๅ•ใ€‚

Hebrew (ืขื‘ืจื™ืช)

ื›ื•ืชืจืช: ืžื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ืขืœื™ื™ืช ืžืก ืจื›ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื›ื•ืฉ ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉื” ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื” 2026 โ€“ ื”ืฆืขื” 19
ืžื™ืœื•ืช ืžืคืชื—: ืžื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ืžืก ืจื›ื•ืฉ ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉื”, ืขืœื™ื™ืช ืžืก ื”ืฆืขื” 19, ืžืก ื™ืจื•ืฉืช ื‘ื™ืช ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื” 2026
ืชื™ืื•ืจ: ืžื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ื—ื™ื ืžื™ ืœืขืœื™ื™ืช ืžืก ืจื›ื•ืฉ ืœืคื™ ื”ืฆืขื” 19 ืขืœ ื‘ืชื™ื ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉื” ื‘ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”. ื”ื–ื™ื ื• ืขืจืš ืžื•ืขืจืš, ืฉื•ื•ื™ ืฉื•ืง, ื•ืงื‘ืœื• ืืช ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ื”ืžืก ื”ื—ื“ืฉ ืฉืœื›ื.


Subpage 8: Late Prop 19 Filing Relief โ€“ Supplemental Claim

English

Top 3 Keywords: late Prop 19 filing, supplemental claim Homeowner’s Exemption, missed deadline relief California
Meta Description: Missed the one-year Homeowner’s Exemption deadline? Under RTC ยง63.2(a)(1)(C)(ii), a supplemental claim may restore Prop 19 exclusion retroactively.
Internal Link: https://lbatlaw.com/prop-19-property-tax-lawyer-san-diego
External Links: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=RTC&sectionNum=63.2https://www.sdarcc.gov/

Chinese (ไธญๆ–‡)

ๆ ‡้ข˜: ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆ้€พๆœŸ็”ณๆŠฅๆ•‘ๆตŽ โ€“ ่กฅๅ……็”ณ่ฏท
ๅ…ณ้”ฎ่ฏ: ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆ้€พๆœŸ็”ณๆŠฅ, ่‡ชไฝๅ…็จŽ่กฅๅ……็”ณ่ฏท, ๅŠ ๅทž้”™่ฟ‡ๆˆชๆญขๆ—ฅๆœŸๆ•‘ๆตŽ
ๆ่ฟฐ: ้”™่ฟ‡ไบ†่‡ชไฝๅ…็จŽ็š„ไธ€ๅนด็”ณๆŠฅๆœŸ้™๏ผŸๆ นๆฎRTC ยง63.2(a)(1)(C)(ii)๏ผŒ่กฅๅ……็”ณ่ฏทๅฏไปฅ่ฟฝๆบฏๆ€งๅœฐๆขๅค็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆ่ฑๅ…ใ€‚

Hebrew (ืขื‘ืจื™ืช)

ื›ื•ืชืจืช: ื”ืงืœื” ื‘ื”ื’ืฉื” ืžืื•ื—ืจืช ืœื”ืฆืขื” 19 โ€“ ืชื‘ื™ืขื” ืžืฉืœื™ืžื”
ืžื™ืœื•ืช ืžืคืชื—: ื”ื’ืฉื” ืžืื•ื—ืจืช ืœื”ืฆืขื” 19, ืชื‘ื™ืขื” ืžืฉืœื™ืžื” ืœืคื˜ื•ืจ ื‘ืขืœื™ื, ื”ืงืœื” ืขืœ ื”ื—ืžืฆืช ืžื•ืขื“ ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”
ืชื™ืื•ืจ: ื”ื—ืžืฆืชื ืืช ืžื•ืขื“ ื”ื”ื’ืฉื” ื”ืฉื ืชื™ ืœืคื˜ื•ืจ ื‘ืขืœื™ื? ืœืคื™ RTC ยง63.2(a)(1)(C)(ii), ืชื‘ื™ืขื” ืžืฉืœื™ืžื” ืขืฉื•ื™ื” ืœื”ื—ื–ื™ืจ ืืช ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื”ืฆืขื” 19 ื‘ืื•ืคืŸ ืจื˜ืจื•ืืงื˜ื™ื‘ื™.


Subpage 9: QPRT vs Living Trust for Prop 19

English

Top 3 Keywords: QPRT vs living trust, Prop 19 trust strategies, California estate planning property tax
Meta Description: QPRT vs. Living Trust for Prop 19 planning. Why a living trust preserves stepped-up basis while a QPRT often doesn’t. Compare strategies.
Internal Link: https://lbatlaw.com/prop-19-property-tax-lawyer-san-diego
External Links: https://www.irs.gov/retirement-plans/qualified-personal-residence-trustshttps://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=RTC&sectionNum=63.2

Chinese (ไธญๆ–‡)

ๆ ‡้ข˜: QPRTไธŽ็”Ÿๅ‰ไฟกๆ‰˜ๅฏนๆฏ” โ€“ ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆไฟกๆ‰˜็ญ–็•ฅ
ๅ…ณ้”ฎ่ฏ: QPRTไธŽ็”Ÿๅ‰ไฟกๆ‰˜ๅฏนๆฏ”, ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆไฟกๆ‰˜็ญ–็•ฅ, ๅŠ ๅทžๆˆฟไบง็จŽ้—ไบง่ง„ๅˆ’
ๆ่ฟฐ: QPRTไธŽ็”Ÿๅ‰ไฟกๆ‰˜ๅœจ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆ่ง„ๅˆ’ไธญ็š„ๅฏนๆฏ”ใ€‚ไธบไป€ไนˆ็”Ÿๅ‰ไฟกๆ‰˜ไฟ็•™้€’ๅขž็จŽๅŸบ่€ŒQPRT้€šๅธธไธ่ƒฝใ€‚็ญ–็•ฅๆฏ”่พƒใ€‚

Hebrew (ืขื‘ืจื™ืช)

ื›ื•ืชืจืช: QPRT ืœืขื•ืžืช ื ืืžื ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื ืœื”ืฆืขื” 19 โ€“ ืืกื˜ืจื˜ื’ื™ื•ืช ื ืืžื ื•ืช
ืžื™ืœื•ืช ืžืคืชื—: QPRT ืœืขื•ืžืช ื ืืžื ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื, ืืกื˜ืจื˜ื’ื™ื•ืช ื ืืžื ื•ืช ื”ืฆืขื” 19, ืชื›ื ื•ืŸ ืขื™ื–ื‘ื•ืŸ ืžืก ืจื›ื•ืฉ ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”
ืชื™ืื•ืจ: ื”ืฉื•ื•ืื” ื‘ื™ืŸ QPRT ืœื ืืžื ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื ืœืชื›ื ื•ืŸ ื”ืฆืขื” 19. ืžื“ื•ืข ื ืืžื ื•ืช ื—ื™ื™ื ืฉื•ืžืจืช ืขืœ ื‘ืกื™ืก ืžื•ื’ื“ืœ ื‘ืขื•ื“ ืฉ-QPRT ื‘ื“ืจืš ื›ืœืœ ืœื. ื”ืฉื•ื•ืืช ืืกื˜ืจื˜ื’ื™ื•ืช.


Subpage 10: California Prop 19 Family Farm Exclusion

English

Top 3 Keywords: family farm exclusion Prop 19, California agricultural property tax, parent-child farm transfer
Meta Description: Proposition 19’s family farm exclusion allows parent-child transfer without reassessment. Requirements, filing deadlines, and value caps explained.
Internal Link: https://lbatlaw.com/prop-19-property-tax-lawyer-san-diego
External Links: https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?lawCode=RTC&sectionNum=63.2https://www.boe.ca.gov/prop19/

Chinese (ไธญๆ–‡)

ๆ ‡้ข˜: ๅŠ ๅทž็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆๅฎถๅบญๅ†œๅœบ่ฑๅ…
ๅ…ณ้”ฎ่ฏ: ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆๅฎถๅบญๅ†œๅœบ่ฑๅ…, ๅŠ ๅทžๅ†œไธšๆˆฟไบง็จŽ, ไบฒๅญๅ†œๅœบ่ฝฌ็งป
ๆ่ฟฐ: ็ฌฌ19ๅทๆๆกˆ็š„ๅฎถๅบญๅ†œๅœบ่ฑๅ…ๅ…่ฎธไบฒๅญ่ฝฌ็งป่€Œไธ่งฆๅ‘้‡ไผฐใ€‚่ฏฆ่งฃ่ฆๆฑ‚ใ€็”ณๆŠฅๆˆชๆญขๆ—ฅๆœŸๅ’Œไปทๅ€ผไธŠ้™ใ€‚

Hebrew (ืขื‘ืจื™ืช)

ื›ื•ืชืจืช: ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื—ื•ื•ื” ืžืฉืคื—ืชื™ืช ื‘ื”ืฆืขื” 19 ื‘ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”
ืžื™ืœื•ืช ืžืคืชื—: ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื—ื•ื•ื” ืžืฉืคื—ืชื™ืช ื”ืฆืขื” 19, ืžืก ืจื›ื•ืฉ ื—ืงืœืื™ ืงืœื™ืคื•ืจื ื™ื”, ื”ืขื‘ืจืช ื—ื•ื•ื” ื”ื•ืจื”-ื™ืœื“
ืชื™ืื•ืจ: ืคื˜ื•ืจ ื”ื—ื•ื•ื” ื”ืžืฉืคื—ืชื™ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืฆืขื” 19 ืžืืคืฉืจ ื”ืขื‘ืจื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื•ืจื” ืœื™ืœื“ ืœืœื ื”ืขืจื›ืช ืžืก ืžื—ื•ื“ืฉืช. ื”ืกื‘ืจ ืขืœ ื“ืจื™ืฉื•ืช, ืžื•ืขื“ื™ ื”ื’ืฉื” ื•ืžื’ื‘ืœื•ืช ืขืจืš.

โ† Back

Thank you for your response. โœจ

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AI-Generated Content Disclosure: The core legal information is based on California law, but the presentation and structure were AI-enhanced for educational clarity.

Legal Disclaimer: This video is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice, nor does it create an attorney-client relationship. You should consult directly with a qualified California attorney licensed in your state for advice on your specific legal situation. Laws and procedures change, and your individual circumstances require personalized counsel.

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