It sounds strange to say it, but I want to
make selling a home affordable. At
our upcoming Board of Supervisors meeting, I’m bringing forward an
effort that I believe is long overdue — and absolutely essential if we
want to give families, seniors, veterans, and young people a real shot
at homeownership again.
Southern California is facing a housing crisis that has been
decades in the making. We all see it: home prices that have
skyrocketed far beyond inflation, a permitting system that takes
years, lawsuits that kill projects before they ever break ground, and
an entire generation priced out of the American Dream.
But there’s another part of the problem that rarely gets talked
about — and it’s one of the biggest things freezing our housing
supply: federal capital gains taxes on home
sales.

A system stuck in 1997
Right now, when a homeowner sells their primary residence, they can
exclude up to $250,000 in gains if they’re single, or $500,000 if
married. That number hasn’t changed
since 1997 — when the
median U.S. home price was
about $145,000.
Fast forward to today:
-
The median detached home in Southern
California is over $900,000.
-
A family needs roughly $180,000 a
year just to qualify for a mortgage.
-
The age of the first-time homebuyer has hit a
record 40 years old.
Seniors who want to downsize and retire with dignity often can’t
afford the tax hit, so they stay put. Families who would otherwise
move into bigger or smaller homes don’t. And young people have fewer
and fewer options because the homes
that should be coming onto the
market simply never do.
The result? A locked-up housing market where everyone loses.
Why this matters
People often blame older generations for “not moving” and blocking
supply. But the truth is simple:
Selling means tens or even
hundreds of thousands of dollars in capital gains taxes — money most
families simply cannot afford to
lose.
If we want more homes available, if we want prices to stabilize,
and if we truly want to give young families and first-time buyers a
fair chance, we must modernize these outdated federal tax
exclusions.
What I’m proposing
At our next meeting, I’m asking the County to officially support
federal legislation that increases — or even eliminates — the capital
gains tax on home sales.
There are already bills in Congress that would:
-
Double the current exclusion and
index it to inflation, or
-
Eliminate the tax entirely for
primary residences.
Either approach would free up housing, restore mobility in the
market, and create opportunities for families across every community
in Southern California.
This is about fairness, opportunity, and the
future
This helps seniors. It helps families. It helps first-time
homebuyers. And it helps fix a housing market that has been broken for
far too long.
Everyone deserves a path to homeownership — and keeping outdated
federal tax rules from 1997 shouldn’t stand in the way.
I look forward to bringing this forward and continuing the fight to
make Southern California more affordable, more accessible, and more
fair for the people who call it home.
If you have thoughts or stories about how this issue affects you or
someone you know, I’d love to hear them.