Boe 58 ah 2025

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open the BOE-58-AH in the editor.
  2. Begin by entering your name and mailing address in the designated fields. Ensure all information is accurate and make any necessary corrections.
  3. In Section A, provide the Assessor’s Parcel Number, property address, city, and relevant dates such as purchase or transfer date. If applicable, include probate number and date of death.
  4. Move to Section B for Transferor(s)/Seller(s). Fill in full names, social security numbers, and family relationships to transferee(s). Indicate if this was the transferor's principal residence and check any exemptions that apply.
  5. Complete Section C for Transferee(s)/Buyer(s) by providing their names and relationships to transferor(s). If there are additional transferors or transferees, continue on the reverse side as instructed.
  6. Finally, review all entries for accuracy before signing. Ensure that both transferor(s) and transferee(s) certify their information under penalty of perjury.

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Proposition 58 in California Explained Proposition 58 allows parents to transfer property to their children without triggering a property tax reassessment. Similarly, Proposition 193 permits grandparents to transfer property to their grandchildren without facing property tax reassessment.
Effective February 16, 2021, Proposition 19 replaced Proposition 58, marking a docHub shift in how property tax exclusions work in California. Proposition 19 limits the parent-child exclusion and introduces stricter guidelines for transferring real property.
Proposition 58 allows the new property owner to avoid property tax increases when acquiring property from their parents. The new owners taxes are instead calculated on the established Proposition 13 factored base year value, instead of the current market value when the property is acquired.
What are Propositions 58 and 193? Proposition 58, effective November 6, 1986, is a constitutional amendment approved by the voters of California which excludes from reassessment transfers of real property between parents and children. Proposition 58 is codified by section 63.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.
Ownership proportions must remain the same. If you jointly own a property and wish to transfer it to an LLC for liability protection, reassessment will not happen if each individual still owns 50% of the LLC.

People also ask

Under Prop 19, the only Prop 13 tax base that can be transferred to your children is that of your principal residence to your childand then your child themselves must live on the property as their principal residence.

california reassessment exclusion