See Los Angeles Tried to Tax Mansions. Apartment Construction Tanked. Developers say the levy is making L.A.’s housing shortage worse. The city is considering changes by Paul Kiernan of The WSJ. Excerpts:
"In 2022, Los Angeles voters approved a new levy on sales of the city’s most expensive properties. Proponents dubbed it a “mansion tax.” Revenue was earmarked to help struggling renters and build low-income housing"
"Opponents of the tax—including some former supporters—said the levy is making Los Angeles’s housing shortage worse. Local and state policymakers are now considering whether to modify the tax and ease some of its complicated requirements."
"“There have been some unintended consequences,” said Miguel Santana, chief executive of the California Community Foundation, a nonprofit that supported the tax"
"The tax makes no distinction between a Bel-Air mansion and a market-rate apartment building. So far, 61% of its revenue has come from single-family home sales, city data shows. The rest has come from commercial, multifamily, vacant and mixed-use properties."
"The levy claims 4% of the gross value of most property sales starting at $5.3 million and then jumps to 5.5% for sales at or above $10.6 million."
"Because the property-sales tax applies whether or not a project is profitable, developers said it has led their investors and lenders to bypass Los Angeles projects."
"The city issued building permits for 7,363 multifamily housing units last year, according to federal data. That was down 46% from 2022"
"Sales of multifamily-zoned parcels above the $5.3 million threshold have fallen by nearly two-thirds in the three years since the tax passed, compared with the three years before"
"A study from Harvard Business School and others estimated that the drop in sales caused by Los Angeles’s new tax will offset 80% of the money it raises by reducing property-tax revenue."
"City officials initially projected the transfer tax would bring in $600 million to $1.1 billion in annual revenue. Over three years, city figures show total collections of $1.19 billion."