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HOW MUCH IS OAKLAND'S TRANSFER TAX WHEN YOU SELL YOUR HOME?

Oakland charges a tiered city transfer tax under Measure AA ranging from 1.5% to 2.5% of the full sale price, plus Alameda County's documentary transfer tax of $1.10 per $1,000. For most Oakland sellers in the $1.5M–$3M range, the combined transfer tax bill lands between $24,000 and $56,000. The city tax is customarily split between buyer and seller; the county tax is paid by the seller — but both are negotiable in the purchase contract. Rates are set by the sale price bracket and apply to the entire sale price, not just the amount above each threshold.
In almost every pre-listing conversation I have with Oakland sellers, there's a moment — usually when we're running through a net sheet — where someone goes quiet. It's not the commission. It's not the escrow fees. It's the transfer tax line. On a $2 million home, Oakland's combined transfer taxes total just over $32,000. On a $2.5 million home, that number climbs past $46,000. On a $3 million home, it's close to $56,000. These are real costs that belong on your net sheet before you set a list price — and yet most sellers see them clearly for the first time on the closing statement. This post lays out exactly how Oakland's transfer tax works, what the math looks like at the price points most relevant to the East Bay luxury market, and what you need to understand about the rate structure before you commit to a sale price.

OAKLAND HAS TWO TRANSFER TAXES — AND MOST SELLERS ONLY KNOW ABOUT ONE

When you sell a home in Oakland, you're subject to transfer taxes from two different entities: the City of Oakland and Alameda County. They work differently, and they add up quickly. Alameda County Documentary Transfer Tax is the simpler of the two. California's state-authorized county tax is $1.10 per $1,000 of sale price — effectively 0.11%. On a $2 million sale, that's $2,200. By local custom, the seller pays this. It's modest and consistent across every Alameda County city. Oakland's City Transfer Tax (Measure AA) is where the numbers become significant. Oakland voters passed Measure AA in 2018, creating a tiered city transfer tax structure that is among the highest of any city in the United States. The rate is determined by which price bracket your sale falls into, and it applies to the full sale price within that bracket:
Sale Price Bracket City Tax Rate County Tax Rate
Up to $300,000 1.0% ($10.00 per $1,000) 0.11% ($1.10 per $1,000)
$300,001 – $2,000,000 1.5% ($15.00 per $1,000) 0.11% ($1.10 per $1,000)
$2,000,001 – $5,000,000 1.75% ($17.50 per $1,000) 0.11% ($1.10 per $1,000)
Over $5,000,000 2.5% ($25.00 per $1,000) 0.11% ($1.10 per $1,000)

An important structural note: this is a bracket-based flat rate, not a progressive system. The rate for your bracket applies to your entire sale price — not just the amount above the threshold. A home that sells for $1,999,999 is taxed at 1.5% on the whole amount. A home that sells for $2,000,001 is taxed at 1.75% on the whole amount. That's a meaningful difference in the math.

Note: Transfer tax rates are set by local ordinance and subject to change. Always verify current rates with your title company before finalizing a net sheet.

THE ACTUAL NUMBERS AT FOUR KEY PRICE POINTS

Here's what sellers in Oakland's primary real estate corridors — Rockridge, Temescal, Montclair, Crocker Highlands, Trestle Glen, and Piedmont Avenue — are looking at in 2026:
Sale Price City Tax (Measure AA) County Tax Combined Transfer Tax
$1,500,000 $22,500 (1.5%) $1,650 $24,150
$2,000,000 $30,000 (1.5%) $2,200 $32,200
$2,500,000 $43,750 (1.75%) $2,750 $46,500
$3,000,000 $52,500 (1.75%) $3,300 $55,800
The jump between $2M and $2.5M is particularly striking: $32,200 to $46,500, a difference of over $14,000, driven almost entirely by the bracket shift from 1.5% to 1.75%. Sellers whose homes are likely to sell right around the $2M mark should understand that the combined transfer tax exposure is significantly higher on the other side of that threshold. Your specific number depends on your home's condition, your neighborhood's micro-market, and timing — that's where a real net sheet comes in. The transfer tax is one of several line items I walk through with every seller before we set a strategy.

WHO ACTUALLY PAYS OAKLAND'S TRANSFER TAX?

California law says transfer taxes can be paid by either party — it's a matter of negotiation, not statute. In practice, East Bay custom has settled into a consistent default:
  • Alameda County documentary transfer tax: paid by the seller
  • Oakland city transfer tax (Measure AA): split 50/50 between buyer and seller
In a strong seller's market, buyers sometimes offer to cover a larger share of the city tax to strengthen their offer — particularly for well-prepared, well-priced homes that are drawing multiple offers. In a softer market, the 50/50 split holds firm, and in some cases, sellers may be asked to cover more. The purchase contract is what controls. The customary split is a starting point, not a guarantee. This is exactly why I review transfer tax allocation in every offer I bring to a seller — the headline price and the net price can look very different depending on how this line is written. Internal link: See "How To Handle Multiple Offers Without Regret"

WHERE TRANSFER TAX SITS IN YOUR FULL COST OF SALE

Transfer tax is one piece of a larger picture. For most Oakland sellers, the total cost of a transaction — not including mortgage payoff — runs somewhere between 7% and 10% of the sale price. Here's a rough sense of what that looks like at $2 million:
  • Agent commission: approximately 4.5%–5.5% ($90,000–$110,000, including whatever is offered to the buyer's agent)
  • Transfer taxes (city + county): approximately 1.6% ($32,200 at 1.5% + county)
  • Escrow fees: approximately $4,000–$6,000
  • Title insurance (owner's policy): approximately $4,000–$5,000
  • Natural Hazard Disclosure report: approximately $150–$250
  • Property tax proration and HOA transfer fees: varies
That's a combined transaction cost of roughly $130,000–$160,000 before mortgage payoff on a $2M sale. It's a meaningful number, and it's the kind of detail that doesn't show up in Zillow estimates or automated valuation tools. For a detailed look at the other costs that often catch sellers off guard, see: Every situation is different, and the only way to know your specific number is to run the math with someone who knows this market block by block.

Want to know your specific number? I prepare a custom net sheet for every seller I work with — actual estimated proceeds based on East Bay market data, your home's condition, and current closing costs. No automated estimate, no generic Zestimate. Just real numbers.

Get your custom net sheet

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

How much is Oakland's transfer tax on a $2 million home sale?

On a $2 million Oakland home sale, the city transfer tax is $30,000 (1.5% of the sale price under Measure AA). Alameda County adds $2,200 ($1.10 per $1,000). The combined total is approximately $32,200, before any other closing costs. By local custom, the city tax is typically split 50/50 between buyer and seller, and the county tax is paid by the seller — though all of this is negotiable in the purchase contract.

Who pays the Oakland transfer tax — the buyer or the seller?

In Oakland, the Alameda County documentary transfer tax ($1.10 per $1,000) is paid by the seller by local custom. Oakland's city transfer tax (Measure AA) is customarily split 50/50 between buyer and seller. However, these are defaults, not legal requirements — the purchase contract controls, and both can be negotiated. In a competitive market, buyers sometimes agree to absorb more of the city tax to strengthen their offer.

Does Oakland's transfer tax rate apply to the full sale price or just the amount above each threshold?

Oakland's Measure AA transfer tax is a bracket-based flat rate — the rate for your price bracket applies to the entire sale price, not just the amount above each threshold. A $1,900,000 sale is taxed at 1.5% on the full $1,900,000. This means there is a meaningful rate "cliff" at $2,000,000, where the rate jumps from 1.5% to 1.75% on the total sale price. Sellers pricing close to $2M should factor this into their net sheet.

What is the difference between Oakland's transfer tax and Berkeley's?

Both cities charge city transfer taxes on top of Alameda County's documentary transfer tax. Oakland's city rate under Measure AA ranges from 1.5% ($300K–$2M) to 1.75% ($2M–$5M) to 2.5% ($5M+). Berkeley's current rate is approximately 1.5% under $1.7M and 2.5% above that threshold. For most sellers in the $1.5M–$3M range, Oakland and Berkeley produce comparable transfer tax bills — though Oakland has the notable cliff at the $2M bracket boundary.

Are Oakland transfer taxes the same in every neighborhood?

Yes. Oakland's transfer tax rates are set citywide and apply equally in Rockridge, Temescal, Montclair, Crocker Highlands, Piedmont Avenue, Adams Point, Glenview, and every other neighborhood within Oakland's city limits. The rate depends solely on the sale price, not the location of the property.

THE BOTTOM LINE

Oakland's transfer tax structure is real, it's significant, and it belongs on your net sheet before you decide on a list price — not after. The bracket structure means that pricing decisions aren't just about what the market will pay. A home that sells for $2.05M instead of $1.95M might generate a higher gross number while netting less after tax, depending on how the transfer tax allocation is written into the contract. This is the kind of calculation I work through with every seller I represent in Oakland. If you want those numbers run against your property, your situation, and current market conditions in your specific neighborhood, the link below is the place to start.

Want to know your specific number? I prepare a custom net sheet for every seller I work with — actual estimated proceeds based on East Bay market data, your home's condition, and current closing costs. No automated estimate, no generic Zestimate. Just real numbers.

Get your custom net sheet

ABOUT ROBERT PARKER

Robert Parker is the CEO and team lead of The Parker George Team at Compass, serving the East Bay luxury residential market in Berkeley, Oakland, Piedmont, and surrounding neighborhoods. He helps buyers and sellers navigate the $1M–$5M+ market with a data-driven approach grounded in over a decade of local experience. Connect with Robert at parkergeorge.com. DRE# 01923837.

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