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In these California counties, homeownership depends more on inheritance

Forget the “California Dream” — for the next generation of Golden State residents, the new reality is more like a royal succession.

New property data reveals a bombshell shift in California’s housing market: Homeownership is quickly evolving into a “caste system” where family wealth matters more than your paycheck.

A staggering 16% of all home transfers in 2025 were inheritances — a rate nearly triple what it was at the turn of the millennium and double the national average, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

“When most people struggle to afford homeownership, but some people get to inherit homes without really trying, we don’t have a housing market — we have a caste system defined by family wealth,” Daryl Fairweather, chief economist at real estate brokerage Redfin, said in a recent YouTube video.

In the state’s most affluent coastal enclaves, the numbers are even more lopsided.

If you’re looking to move into a breezy pad in Monterey, Santa Cruz or Napa, you better hope you’re in the will.

More than one in four homes that changed hands in those counties last year weren’t “sold” — they were simply handed down to heirs who, in many cases, are the only ones left who can afford to live there.

Monterey County led the state with 28% of all home transfers being inherited, while Santa Cruz, Napa and Santa Barbara followed closely, each tied at a 27% inheritance rate, according to data from the Wall Street Journal.

Major metropolitan hubs also saw high levels of inherited ownership, with San Francisco recording a 22% rate and Los Angeles at 20%.

Conversely, Yuba County recorded the lowest inheritance rate in California, at 8%, which aligns with the current national average.

This trend of property inheritance has less to do with love or even the actual process of inheriting, and more with the dire condition of the California housing market, according to Matt Delventhal, an economist at Cotality.

“People know that unless they give their home to their kids, their kids have no shot at staying in California as homeowners,” Delventhal told the Chronicle.

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“People know that unless they give their home to their kids, their kids have no shot at staying in California as homeowners,” Delventhal told the Chronicle.

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Tax rules also make it cheaper to keep homes in the family.

When homeowners sell, they usually pay taxes on the increase in the value of their property. However, if they pass the home on after death, the tax bill disappears, making it easier to keep the property for future generations, even if it’s no longer needed.

California’s Proposition 13, passed in the 1970s, limited how much property taxes could increase, and later changes allowed heirs to inherit these low tax rates.

While Proposition 19 in 2021 tried to limit these tax breaks by requiring heirs to use the home as their primary residence, it hasn’t really opened up much new housing supply, since most heirs still live in the homes they inherit instead of selling or renting them.

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