Los Angeles Transfer Tax Calculator


 

Selling or buying real estate in Los Angeles means navigating at least three layers of transfer tax: a City of Los Angeles base tax, a County tax, and a State tax — and if your property is worth more than $5.3 million, a fourth layer called Measure ULA. This guide walks through every calculation step in plain English, with two worked examples at each stage.

Step 1 — Calculate Net Value and Gross Value

Before the calculator touches any tax rate, it needs two foundational numbers: the Net Value and the Gross Value. These are the foundation of everything else.

Net Value is the sale price minus any mortgage or lien the buyer is taking over. It can never go below zero. The City of Los Angeles base tax, plus the County and State taxes, are all calculated on Net Value — because you’re only being taxed on the actual equity changing hands, not on debt someone else already owed.[2]

Net Value = Sale Price − Liens Assumed (Minimum of $0 — can never be negative)

Gross Value is the sale price plus any liens. This is the number used for Measure ULA (the mansion tax), because that tax was designed to capture the full transaction size regardless of financing.[2]

Gross Value = Sale Price + Liens Assumed

Example A — Standard home sale with a mortgage

Sale Price: $800,000  |  Liens assumed by buyer: $200,000

Net Value = $800,000 − $200,000 = $600,000

Gross Value = $800,000 + $200,000 = $1,000,000

Example B — Commercial sale with large existing loan

Sale Price: $10,000,000  |  Liens assumed: $3,000,000

Net Value = $10,000,000 − $3,000,000 = $7,000,000

Gross Value = $10,000,000 + $3,000,000 = $13,000,000

Step 2 — Check Buyer Type Exemptions

Who is buying the property matters enormously. The calculator checks the buyer type before computing any tax, because certain buyers wipe out some or all of the taxes entirely.

Government buyers (federal, state, or local agencies) are completely exempt from every tax — City base, Measure ULA, County, and State. The rationale is that governments don’t generate the kind of economic activity that transfer taxes are designed to capture.[1]

Nonprofit buyers — specifically IRS-recognized 501(c)(3) organizations, Community Land Trusts (CLTs), and Limited-Equity Housing Cooperatives (LEHCs) — are exempt from the Measure ULA surtax only. They still pay the City base tax, County tax, and State tax. The City of Los Angeles carved this out to encourage affordable housing acquisitions.[1]

Buyer TypeCity Base TaxMeasure ULACounty TaxState Tax
Individual / BusinessOwedOwedOwedOwed
501(c)(3) NonprofitOwedExemptOwedOwed
Community Land TrustOwedExemptOwedOwed
Federal / State / Local GovernmentExemptExemptExemptExempt

Example A — Individual buyer at $6 million

Buyer type: Individual. No exemptions apply. The calculator proceeds with all four tax calculations in full.

Result: All four taxes computed normally.

Example B — City of Los Angeles acquires a building

Buyer type: Local Government. Sale price: $12,000,000.

Result: All four taxes = $0. Government exemption applies across the board.

Step 3 — City of Los Angeles Base Tax

If the property is inside the City of Los Angeles (not just LA County — the City itself), the calculator charges the City’s base transfer tax. This has been in place since 1966 under Los Angeles Municipal Code Article 1.9.[2]

The rate is $2.25 per every $500 of Net Value — which works out to 0.45%. The calculator always rounds the Net Value up to the nearest $500 before applying the rate. This rounding-up rule is what makes it slightly different from a simple percentage calculation. No tax is charged if the Net Value is under $100.

Tax Units = Net Value ÷ 500, rounded UP to next whole number City Base Tax = Tax Units × $2.25

Key rule: The City base tax applies only to properties inside the City of Los Angeles. Properties in other parts of LA County — like Burbank, Pasadena, or unincorporated areas — do not pay this tax.

Example A — $100,000 sale, no liens, in LA City

Net Value = $100,000

Tax Units = $100,000 ÷ $500 = 200 (exactly, no rounding needed)

City Base Tax = 200 × $2.25 = $450

City Base Tax = $450

Example B — $7,000,000 net value, in LA City

Net Value = $7,000,000

Tax Units = $7,000,000 ÷ $500 = 14,000

City Base Tax = 14,000 × $2.25 = $31,500

City Base Tax = $31,500

Step 4 — Measure ULA (The Mansion Tax)

Measure ULA — officially the Homelessness and Housing Solutions Tax — was approved by LA voters in November 2022 and took effect April 1, 2023.[1] It applies on top of the base tax and is the single largest potential expense in this calculator.

Unlike the base tax, Measure ULA is calculated on the Gross Value (sale price plus liens), not the Net Value. It also uses a simple percentage rather than the per-$500 unit method. As of July 1, 2025, the thresholds are inflation-adjusted:[1]

If Gross Value ≥ $10,600,000 → ULA Tax = Gross Value × 5.5% If Gross Value > $5,300,000 → ULA Tax = Gross Value × 4.0% If Gross Value ≤ $5,300,000 → ULA Tax = $0

Notice that the higher tier takes full precedence: if your Gross Value hits $10.6 million, you pay 5.5% on the entire amount, not just the portion above the threshold. These thresholds are adjusted annually using the Consumer Price Index.

Important: Divorce, gifts, and trusts do not exempt you from Measure ULA. The City of Los Angeles does not recognize those state-law exemptions for its own taxes. A divorce transfer on a $7 million property still triggers ULA.[2]

Example A — $6,000,000 sale with $1,000,000 lien (Tier 1)

Sale Price: $6,000,000  |  Liens: $1,000,000

Gross Value = $6,000,000 + $1,000,000 = $7,000,000

$7,000,000 > $5,300,000 but < $10,600,000 → Tier 1 applies

ULA Tax = $7,000,000 × 4.0% = $280,000

Measure ULA Tax = $280,000

Example B — $13,000,000 gross value (Tier 2)

Gross Value = $13,000,000

$13,000,000 ≥ $10,600,000 → Tier 2 applies

ULA Tax = $13,000,000 × 5.5% = $715,000

Measure ULA Tax = $715,000

Step 5 — Los Angeles County Tax

The LA County Documentary Transfer Tax is imposed under California Revenue and Taxation Code §11911 on all real property transfers throughout LA County — including those inside the City of Los Angeles. It’s collected by the County Recorder at the time of recording.[2]

The rate is $0.55 per $500 of Net Value, using the same rounding-up method as the City base tax. However, the County tax recognizes several transfer types as exempt — situations where no real economic transaction is occurring:

Exempt transfers include: divorce (R&T §11927), gifts (R&T §11930), inheritance (R&T §11930), trust transfers without change of ownership, foreclosures (R&T §11926), certain partnership transfers (R&T §11925), and bankruptcy court orders (R&T §11921).[3]

Tax Units = Net Value ÷ 500, rounded UP County Tax = Tax Units × $0.55 (= $0 if transfer type is exempt)

Example A — $7,000,000 standard sale

Net Value = $7,000,000  |  Transfer type: Standard Sale

Tax Units = $7,000,000 ÷ $500 = 14,000

County Tax = 14,000 × $0.55 = $7,700

County Tax = $7,700

Example B — $7,000,000 divorce transfer

Net Value = $7,000,000  |  Transfer type: Divorce (R&T §11927)

Divorce transfers are exempt from County tax.

County Tax = $0

Step 6 — California State Tax

California imposes its own Documentary Transfer Tax under Revenue and Taxation Code §11911 at the same rate as the County: $0.55 per $500 of Net Value.[3] In practice, the County Recorder collects both taxes together (half goes to the county, half to the state), but the calculator shows them as separate line items for clarity.

The State tax follows the same exemption rules as the County tax — the same transfer types (divorce, gift, trust, foreclosure, etc.) that are exempt from County tax are also exempt from the State portion. Government buyers are always exempt. Individual sales with no special transfer type pay in full.

Tax Units = Net Value ÷ 500, rounded UP State Tax = Tax Units × $0.55 (= $0 if transfer type is exempt or buyer is government)

Example A — $1,000,000 sale, no liens, standard sale

Net Value = $1,000,000

Tax Units = $1,000,000 ÷ $500 = 2,000

State Tax = 2,000 × $0.55 = $1,100

State Tax = $1,100

Example B — $5,000,000 gift transfer

Transfer type: Gift (R&T §11930 — no consideration exchanged)

Gift transfers are exempt from both County and State documentary tax.

State Tax = $0

Step 7 — Add It All Together

Once all four components are calculated, the total transfer tax is simply the sum. This is what you’d need to budget for — and what will be collected at the time the deed is recorded by the LA County Recorder.[2]

Total Tax = City Base Tax + Measure ULA + County Tax + State Tax

Full Example 1 — High-value commercial sale in LA City

Complete walkthrough

Inputs: Sale Price $10,000,000  |  Liens $3,000,000  |  LA City: Yes  |  Buyer: Individual  |  Transfer: Standard Sale

Net Value = $7,000,000  |  Gross Value = $13,000,000

City Base Tax = 14,000 × $2.25 = $31,500

Measure ULA = $13,000,000 × 5.5% = $715,000 (Gross ≥ $10.6M → Tier 2)

County Tax = 14,000 × $0.55 = $7,700

State Tax = 14,000 × $0.55 = $7,700

Total Transfer Tax = $31,500 + $715,000 + $7,700 + $7,700 = $761,900

Full Example 2 — Nonprofit acquiring affordable housing

Complete walkthrough

Inputs: Sale Price $6,000,000  |  Liens $0  |  LA City: Yes  |  Buyer: 501(c)(3) Nonprofit  |  Transfer: Standard Sale

Net Value = $6,000,000  |  Gross Value = $6,000,000

City Base Tax = 12,000 × $2.25 = $27,000

Measure ULA = $0 (Nonprofit buyer — ULA exempt)

County Tax = 12,000 × $0.55 = $6,600

State Tax = 12,000 × $0.55 = $6,600

Total Transfer Tax = $27,000 + $0 + $6,600 + $6,600 = $40,200

Disclaimer: This calculator and guide are for informational and educational purposes only. Transfer tax rules can change, and individual circumstances vary. Always confirm tax obligations with a licensed real estate attorney, title company, or the LA County Recorder’s office before closing.


References & Official Sources

  1. City of Los Angeles Office of Finance — Real Property Transfer Tax & Measure ULA FAQ. Covers rates, Measure ULA thresholds (July 2025: $5.3M / $10.6M), nonprofit and government exemptions, and the effective date of April 1, 2023. Available at finance.lacity.gov.
  2. Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder / County Clerk — Documentary Transfer Tax: General Information. Explains the $0.55 per $500 county/state rate, the net vs. gross value distinction, and collection at recordation. Available at lavote.gov.
  3. California Revenue & Taxation Code §§11911–11933 — The state statutes governing documentary transfer taxes, including exemptions for divorce (§11927), gifts and inheritance (§11930), foreclosure (§11926), trust transfers, partnership interests (§11925), and bankruptcy (§11921). Available at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov.
  4. Los Angeles Municipal Code (LAMC), Article 1.9 — Real Property Transfer Tax. Establishes the City’s base rate of $2.25 per $500 of net consideration (effective since 1966) and defines “consideration” as value excluding encumbrances. Published via American Legal Publishing.
  5. LAMC §21.9.14–21.9.15 — Measure ULA provisions defining “Qualified Affordable Housing Organizations” (501(c)(3)s, CLTs, LEHCs) and government exemptions from the ULA surtax. Enacted following the November 2022 voter approval.
  6. LA County — Notice of Exempt Transactions (Documentary Transfer Tax). Lists required deed language for exempt transfers such as “Dissolution of marriage – R&T §11927” and inter-vivos gift transfers under R&T §11930.

This article was written for educational purposes. Tax rates and thresholds reflect the July 2025 CPI-adjusted figures. Always consult a qualified professional for advice specific to your transaction.

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