§453 · Sell Self-Storage Facility California

Selling Your Self-Storage Facility in California — Defer the Capital Gain

If you're selling a self-storage facility in California, the tax math depends heavily on your state's capital-gains treatment. California's top LTCG rate is 13.3% + 1% MHS — combined with federal 23.8% (20% LTCG + 3.8% NIIT), a lump-sum sale gives back 38% of your gain in year one. IRC §453 structured installment sale spreads the gain across the payment schedule, keeping you in lower brackets each year.

§453 Mechanic — How the Money Flows

Buyer cash → Assignment Co. → A-rated carrier → You, on schedule

BUYER pays full cash at closing ASSIGNMENT CO. qualified entity, regulated purchases annuity A-RATED CARRIER Pacific Life · MetLife Independent Life · USAA SELLER (you) paid on chosen 5-30 yr schedule Closing day — one wire, one assignment Gain recognized proportionally each year per IRC §453 (Treas. Reg. §15A.453-1)

This page covers the self-storage facility sale in California specifically. For the general framework see the self-storage facility guide or the §453 SIS basics.

The math — $6M sale, 20-year hold, California resident

ApproachEffective tax rateTax bill
Lump sum38%~$1.94M (32%)
10-year §45327%~$1.42M (24%)

The §453 spread captures roughly the difference between these two numbers — typically 8-12 percentage points of the gain depending on your specific deal economics and California's bracket structure.

California-specific tax wrinkle

California Mental Health Services Tax adds 1% on gains over $1M. CA does not conform to §1202 QSBS exclusion for pre-2008 stock — federal exclusion still applies.

The California self-storage facility market

California has 3,200+ self-storage facilities, the largest concentration in the country. Public Storage is HQ'd in Glendale CA — they buy aggressively statewide. Coastal markets (Bay Area, LA/OC, San Diego) trade at 4-5% cap rates; Central Valley + Inland Empire at 5.5-7%. CA Mobilehome Park rules don't apply but Title 24 climate-control requirements push HVAC §1245 exposure higher than other states. ELS, CubeSmart, and Extra Space all compete for institutional-grade facilities.

California buyers and consolidators

The active acquirers buying self-storage facilitys in California: Public Storage (NYSE: PSA), Extra Space Storage (NYSE: EXR), CubeSmart (NYSE: CUBE), National Storage Affiliates (NYSE: NSA). These institutional buyers' M&A counsel are familiar with the §453 mechanic — papering the assignment at closing is standard.

Self-Storage Facility-specific §453 wrinkle (applies in every state)

§1250 recapture on the building + paved areas spreads under §453. §1245 on climate-control HVAC, gate controllers, security systems is year-one ordinary recapture.

When this fits a California seller

  • $1.5M+ sale price (carrier minimums on the §453-deferred portion)
  • Long hold with meaningful gain (where California's 13.3% + 1% MHS state rate stacks on federal)
  • Sophisticated buyer whose counsel will paper the §453 assignment
  • California resident at closing (state residency matters for the state-tax piece)

How I work

Hans Goldstein, IRC §453 specialist. I place §453 structured installment sales through carrier-appointed brokerage relationships with Pacific Life, MetLife, Independent Life, and USAA Life — all four licensed in all 50 states including California.

Free 15-minute fit-check call. Bring your California sale details (price, basis, prior depreciation if applicable, closing timeline) — I model lump-sum vs §453 against your actual numbers.

Frequently asked

Q: I'm a California resident but the property is in another state. Where's the tax? A: Generally the gain is sourced to where the property sits (real estate) or where the seller resides (intangibles). Talk to your CPA on multi-state allocation; §453 mechanic works the same.

Q: I'm planning to move out of California before closing. Does that change anything? A: Maybe. California's residency tests differ — California's exit tests are aggressive; other states less so. Talk to a state-tax specialist before timing the move.

Q: Does the §453 mechanic differ state-to-state? A: No. §453 is federal. State tax rates determine the size of the savings; the mechanic is identical.

Hans Goldstein, NPN 20602398

📄 Get the §453 Quick Reference PDF + free fit-check

4-page reference card on the §453 SIS mechanic, when it fits, §453-vs-DST comparison, and state-by-state math. Built for sellers and CPAs.

Drop your info — instant PDF download + within 1 business day Hans will email a preliminary read on which structure fits your deal. No retainer. Carrier compensates the broker — not you.

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📞 Hans Goldstein · 213-726-0518 · CA Insurance License #4322192 · Independent §453 specialist · Goldstein & Co. LLC

Educational. Not tax or legal advice. California tax treatment of §453 generally follows federal — confirm with your CPA.

Run your specific numbers

The calculator runs your sale through real 2026 federal + state tax brackets and shows §453 savings vs lump sum side-by-side.

Run the calculator → 213-726-0518