Measure ULA: What LA's Transfer Tax Means for Your Exit
Measure ULA, the City of Los Angeles's 'mansion tax' on high-value property transfers, took effect April 1, 2023 and has reshaped exit planning for anyone who owns commercial or multifamily real estate inside city limits. It does not touch financing directly, but it changes which financing strategy makes sense: sell, refinance, or hold.
The Numbers That Matter
The Tax Tiers
Measure ULA applies only to property sales within the City of Los Angeles, not countywide. Every sale already pays the standard combined city and county documentary transfer tax of roughly 0.56% (0.45% city plus 0.11% county). On top of that base tax, Measure ULA adds 4% for the portion of a sale in its middle tier and 5.5% for its top tier, for an all-in combined rate of roughly 4.56% and 6.06% respectively.
The original 2023 tier breakpoints were $5,000,000 and $10,000,000, and the ordinance indexes those thresholds for inflation each year, so the current breakpoints run somewhat higher than the original figures. Sellers should confirm the exact current-year thresholds and combined rate with escrow or counsel before relying on a specific number.
On a $30 million sale at the roughly 6.06% top-tier combined rate, transfer tax runs in the neighborhood of $1,800,000, due at closing regardless of the seller's basis or gain. For a leveraged apartment building, that is real money coming off the top of proceeds before the loan is paid off and equity is returned.
The tax has been challenged in court multiple times since it passed. It remains in effect as of this writing, but sellers should confirm current status and exact thresholds with escrow or counsel before finalizing a sale, since litigation and any future amendments could change the mechanics.
Strategies That Change the Financing Conversation
Several strategies have emerged in response to ULA, and each has a different financing implication. Hold-for-income rather than sell avoids the tax entirely, which is why owners of stabilized City of LA apartment buildings are increasingly asking about long-term fixed-rate agency or life-company debt rather than planning an exit.
Refinance-and-return-equity is the other common play: a cash-out refinance lets an owner extract a meaningful share of appreciated value without triggering a sale (and therefore without triggering ULA), while retaining the asset and its financing in place. This has increased demand for bridge and bank cash-out refinance products on stabilized City of LA multifamily specifically.
Some owners and advisors have explored selling entity interests (an LLC that owns the property) rather than the property itself, on the theory that ULA taxes real property transfers rather than entity transfers. The legal status of that approach is genuinely uncertain and being tested; anyone considering it needs dedicated tax and real estate counsel, not general guidance.
What This Means for Buyers, Not Just Sellers
Buyers underwriting a City of LA acquisition above the $5 million threshold should model ULA into their own eventual exit, not just focus on the immediate purchase. A deal that pencils on a 5-year hold with a sale exit needs to account for the tax tier the sale price will land in; a deal underwritten with a refinance-and-hold exit strategy from day one avoids that math entirely.
This is one of the clearest examples of a purely local regulation changing capital markets behavior: financing structures that avoid a taxable sale event have become measurably more attractive for City of LA assets above the ULA thresholds since 2023.
Measure ULA: What LA's Transfer Tax Means for Your Exit: FAQ
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