There are a number of states one can move to -buy a house (cash) for $500,000 or $600,000 and put the rest in the bank....so yea.Sell the million dollar house and retire homeless? Loving the logic.
If you sell your home in California-one doesn't expect to move back. Don't forget if you sell one house and buy another you have a capitol gains exemption.Yeah let's not forget gains taxes by the time you get through selling a million dollar house you'll be lucky if you walk away with 850k. 850k in California doesn't really get you much!
So all these people that are bailing out of California and thinking they're going to make a killing on their houses they get a real hard door slammed in their face when they pay their taxes and if they decide to come back it's almost impossible unless they are multiple homeowners.
Then you can join the homeless community.
Just my two cents here
So you’re saying over the course of 20 years, I could pay really high property taxes and then pocket a few dollars when I move somewhere cheaper? Why not just live somewhere more reasonable and invest the difference.If you sell your home in California-one doesn't expect to move back. Don't forget if you sell one house and buy another you have a capitol gains exemption.
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When you sell your home, the IRS allows one major form of capital gains break. It’s called the home sale exclusion, and it allows you to deduct a significant amount of the profit from your home sale to minimize or avoid capital gains taxes.
You California bashers really need to get your facts straight. Its pitiful how much hate and then the misinformation that's spewed. Check out prop 13 in California- a protection I may add that very few other states have.So you’re saying over the course of 20 years, I could pay really high property taxes and then pocket a few dollars when I move somewhere cheaper? Why not just live somewhere more reasonable and invest the difference.
Move to rural Pennsylvania away from the cities and live like kardashians.Sell the million dollar house and retire homeless? Loving the logic.
That is what we did. Sold high after living in CA since birth. Absolutely no regrets and no desire whatsoever to go back. Almost daily I see something in the news that reinforces why we left. My list keeps getting longer and longer.If you sell your home in California-one doesn't expect to move back. Don't forget if you sell one house and buy another you have a capitol gains exemption.
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When you sell your home, the IRS allows one major form of capital gains break. It’s called the home sale exclusion, and it allows you to deduct a significant amount of the profit from your home sale to minimize or avoid capital gains taxes.
Because it's not needed.You California bashers really need to get your facts straight. Its pitiful how much hate and then the misinformation that's spewed. Check out prop 13 in California- a protection I may add that very few other states have.
Because it's not needed.
In most localities assessments might make big jumps from time to time based on market evaluation by the assessors office, but the govt then resets the millage rate to arrive at the taxes due. Pretending that regulating assessments protects the homeowner from tax jumps is a fallacy.
I've enjoyed my California time and have friends there. I also understand that not all of the state is major metro areas. I'm not slamming your life decision of residency. Just don't claim that a ballooning real estate market is a simple win for the homeowner, that couldn't have been realized elsewhere, without recognizing other factors are at play. My investments can be owned anywhere, and they pay me annual dividends on top of growth...rather than taxes, insurance, maintenance, natural disasters, and govt overreach subtracting from that growth.
So 2GAT123 will turn into 123GAT2 on all the TV shows.
I appreciate how states like Mass and NJ are trying to make do with six characters, using up most of the possible combinations.
I'll have to disagree with this as California is one of the few in that the plate stays with the car. I have bought five classics since 1985 and all kept the same plate when first registered in California. Three, a 68 (1 owner), a 72 ( 1 owner), and 73 (two owners) were recently changed to correct YOM plates. The sixth car was gifted to me by a friend and the original 1991 plate is still on the car after two previous owners.They 100% do not. Every used vehicle I bought I have received a new plate with a new number, not including the custom plates on Mustangs.
I have also experienced this and bought 5-6 cars from California. The plates went with me, and I still have them.I'll have to disagree with this as California is one of the few in that the plate stays with the car. I have bought five classics since 1985 and all kept the same plate when first registered in California. Three, a 68 (1 owner), a 72 ( 1 owner), and 73 (two owners) were recently changed to correct YOM plates. The sixth car was gifted to me by a friend and the original 1991 plate is still on the car after two previous owners.
CA is beautiful and I’ve enjoyed my visits there. I would never live there.Well its just that there is so little to say that's "good" about the State.
Except the current policy is to never reuse the number. I am sure when we flip around again we will be forced to reuse some older number now that we are in the computer age.176 million unique license plate combinations isn’t enough for 39million people
There's always reverse mortgage or HELOC you can cash out of your equity to live on as you go.Sell the million dollar house and retire homeless? Loving the logic.
I have bought and sold quite a few cars in the past that kept the same license plate number since the 90s. We are 9XXXYYY now and I sold a couple that were in the 4XXXYYY range recently (from the late 90s). The new owner kept that.They 100% do not. Every used vehicle I bought I have received a new plate with a new number, not including the custom plates on Mustangs.
Never live anywhere else. Walking the beaches of the Pacific Ocean or among the Redwoods and Sequoias is unmatched by anything else.CA is beautiful and I’ve enjoyed my visits there. I would never live there.