Some of the most architecturally significant homes in Los Angeles County — the Spanish Revivals of Hancock Park, the Mediterranean estates of Pasadena, the Mid-Century Modern icons of the Hollywood Hills, the Craftsman properties of West Adams — carry a Mills Act contract attached to the title. For owners and buyers encountering the Mills Act for the first time, the program is a meaningful, underappreciated piece of the economics of historic homeownership in California. Understood properly, it is a significant benefit. Misunderstood, it is a surprise that can take the transaction sideways.
This piece walks through the California Mills Act as it operates in Los Angeles County in 2026 — what it does to property taxes, what it requires of the owner in exchange, how it affects resale, and what buyers and sellers should each be looking at when a Mills Act property is in play.
What the Mills Act Is
The Mills Act is a California state-enabling statute (Government Code Sections 50280 through 50290) that allows local jurisdictions to enter into contracts with owners of qualified historic properties. In exchange for the owner’s commitment to preserve and rehabilitate the property according to recognized historic preservation standards, the county assessor uses an alternative method for valuing the property for property-tax purposes — typically the income-capitalization method — that frequently produces a substantially lower assessed value than the market value on which Proposition 13 would otherwise be based.
The result, for eligible properties, is a property tax bill that can be 40 to 70 percent lower than what the same property would pay without the contract. On a $6 million historic property that recently changed hands, the difference can be tens of thousands of dollars per year in ongoing property tax. Over a 10-year or longer hold period, the cumulative benefit is material.
Which LA Jurisdictions Participate
The Mills Act is permissive — each city or county chooses whether to offer contracts. In Los Angeles County, participating jurisdictions include, among others:
- City of Los Angeles, under the Historic Preservation Overlay Zone (HPOZ) and Historic-Cultural Monument (HCM) designations
- City of Pasadena, among the most active Mills Act programs in the state
- City of Long Beach
- City of Santa Monica, for landmarked properties
- City of Beverly Hills, on a limited basis
- City of South Pasadena, City of Sierra Madre, and other historic-heavy cities in the San Gabriel Valley
Not every historic-looking property qualifies. The home must carry a formal historic designation at the federal, state, or local level. In the City of LA, that typically means designation as a Historic-Cultural Monument or as a contributor to a Historic Preservation Overlay Zone. Absent the formal designation, a Mills Act contract is not available.
How the Tax Savings Work
California Proposition 13 normally caps annual assessed value increases at 2 percent and resets assessed value to market value at sale. For a home purchased at $6 million, the buyer’s annual property tax base is roughly 1.0 to 1.25 percent of $6 million — $60,000 to $75,000 per year, plus local assessments.
Under a Mills Act contract, the assessor instead capitalizes the property’s hypothetical rental income using a statutory formula. The resulting assessed value is often far lower than the market value. The property-tax bill is recalculated off the lower number. A 50 to 60 percent reduction is not uncommon for contracts that have been in place for several years.
The exact savings depend on the property’s rental-equivalent value, prevailing capitalization rates, the assessor’s methodology, and the date the contract was entered. Two identical historic homes on the same block can see meaningfully different tax reductions based on the specifics of their contract and the year it was written.
What the Owner Commits To
The tax benefit is not free. A Mills Act contract obligates the owner to preserve and rehabilitate the property according to the standards referenced in the contract — typically the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for the Treatment of Historic Properties, along with any local preservation guidelines. In practical terms:
- Exterior alterations typically require preservation review and approval before permits issue
- Replacement of original features (windows, doors, stucco, wood siding, tile roofs, etc.) must be in-kind or approved substitutes
- Additions must be architecturally compatible and, depending on jurisdiction, separable from the historic fabric
- Routine maintenance is expected; deferred maintenance can trigger notice and, in severe cases, contract cancellation
- Annual or periodic inspection by the jurisdiction is authorized under the contract
- Interior alterations are generally less restricted, though jurisdictions vary
For an owner whose vision of the property aligns with preserving the historic character, the restrictions are not restrictions — they are the reason the owner bought the property. For an owner who wants to substantially modernize or reconfigure the property, the restrictions can be meaningful frictions. Before purchasing a Mills Act property, a buyer should read the specific contract and the associated preservation guidelines in the jurisdiction of the property.
The 10-Year Rolling Contract
Mills Act contracts are initially written for a minimum 10-year term. The contract automatically renews by one year every year (the “rolling” feature), so the remaining term is always 10 years unless one party files a non-renewal notice. The owner or the jurisdiction can file non-renewal, which stops the automatic extension and begins the countdown to the contract’s eventual termination.
This rolling structure has consequences at sale. A property under a Mills Act contract does not shed the contract on sale. The contract runs with the land and binds successor owners. A buyer of a Mills Act property inherits both the tax benefit and the preservation obligations — automatically. This is not something the buyer agrees to separately; it attaches to the property.
Resale Considerations
Mills Act properties transact slightly differently. Several points to know:
- The tax benefit transfers — at the new assessed value. The reassessment upon sale uses the Mills Act methodology rather than the purchase price, so the new owner starts with a lower tax base than a buyer of a non-Mills property would have. This is a real incentive for buyers, particularly high-tax-bracket buyers who value predictable ongoing costs.
- The preservation restrictions affect the buyer pool. Buyers who want to substantially alter the home will self-select out. Buyers who appreciate historic properties will lean in.
- Financing is largely unaffected. Mills Act properties are financeable through standard portfolio lenders. The contract does not impair the deed of trust.
- Title and escrow need to confirm the contract status. The preliminary title report should show the recorded Mills Act contract. Escrow should confirm the contract is in good standing and the property tax benefit is current.
- Disclosure is mandatory. Sellers must disclose the existence of the Mills Act contract and provide the buyer a copy during the inspection period. A buyer should read it before waiving contingencies.
The effective impact on market value of a Mills Act contract at the LA luxury level is usually neutral to mildly positive — the tax savings attract tax-sensitive buyers, while the preservation restrictions dampen pricing from buyers who want to redevelop. Which effect dominates depends on the specific property and the buyer pool.
What Sellers Should Prepare
Sellers of a Mills Act property should, before listing:
- Pull a current copy of the Mills Act contract and verify its status with the jurisdiction
- Confirm the current property tax assessment reflects the contract
- Assemble documentation of any preservation work performed during the ownership
- Identify and disclose any pending non-renewal notice or violation
- Retain a listing broker who has transacted Mills Act properties and can speak to the buyer pool intelligently
What Buyers Should Investigate
Buyers evaluating a Mills Act property should, during the inspection period:
- Obtain and read the actual contract — the terms can vary between jurisdictions and vintages
- Review the most recent inspection report from the jurisdiction, if any
- Request a written estimate from the assessor’s office of what the new assessed value will be at the buyer’s purchase price under the contract
- Identify any planned alterations and obtain preliminary preservation-review guidance from the jurisdiction
- Consider a historic preservation consultant’s opinion on what can and cannot be done to the property
The Takeaway
The Mills Act is one of the more significant ongoing financial benefits available to owners of historic residential property in California. For the right buyer — one who values the architectural character of the property and accepts the preservation framework — the combination of reduced property tax and formalized preservation stewardship is compelling. For the buyer whose plan involves substantially altering the property, the Mills Act is not the right fit. The role of a broker familiar with these properties is to help the buyer understand which category they are in before the offer is written, and to ensure the contract terms and preservation guidelines are clear and workable for the buyer’s intended use.
