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Descendants of California Homeowners Get to Keep Low Property Taxes, and an Elite Group Reaps Benefits: Analysis

An inherited home once owned by comedian Dom DeLuise in Malibu has received a large property tax break and is available for rent. It is shown in this undated photo. (Credit: Brian van der Brug/Los Angeles Times)

(Credit: Los Angeles Times Graphics)

Actors Jeff and Beau Bridges, along with their sister, own a four-bedroom Malibu home with access to a semi-private beach and panoramic views of the Pacific Ocean.

They inherited it from their mother, who had owned the house since the late 1950s when their father Lloyd Bridges first made it big in Hollywood.

Earlier this year, they advertised the “stunning Malibu dream” for rent at $15,995 a month — a hefty price tag for a house that has a property tax bill of less than half that.

Like other descendants of a generation of California homeowners, the Bridges enjoy a significant perk that keeps their property tax bill low. Part of that is thanks to Proposition 13, which has strictly limited property tax increases since 1978. But they also benefit from an additional tax break, enacted eight years later, that extended those advantages to inherited property — even inherited property that is used for rental income.

Read the full story on LATimes.com

 

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