California continues to be the single biggest source of buyers moving to Las Vegas. The reasons are consistent: no state income tax, homes that cost half as much, and a lower overall cost of living — without giving up a warm climate, great restaurants, or easy access to the outdoors. Here's what you need to know before you make the move.

The Financial Case for Moving

The numbers are stark. A family earning $200,000 a year in California pays roughly $16,000–$18,000 in state income tax. In Nevada, that bill is $0. Over 10 years, that's $160,000+ in your pocket — enough to pay off a significant chunk of a Las Vegas home.

Add in:

  • Nevada property tax rates averaging 0.5–0.7% (California averages 1.1–1.2%)
  • No estate or inheritance tax in Nevada
  • Home prices roughly 40–60% lower than comparable California markets
  • Lower car registration fees, lower utility costs

Most California transplants find their total monthly housing cost drops by $1,500–$3,000 even after buying a larger home.

What Your California Money Buys in Las Vegas

$600K–$800KSummerlin luxury home, 3,000+ sq ft, mountain views
$800K–$1.2MGuard-gated estate, pool, 4–5 bed
$1.5M+MacDonald Highlands / The Ridges luxury

If you're coming from the Bay Area or LA with $1M+ in equity, you can buy outright or nearly outright in some of Las Vegas's best neighborhoods.

Which Neighborhood is Right for You?

If you're coming from the Bay Area / Silicon Valley: Summerlin or Henderson. These are the most polished, master-planned communities in the valley — great schools, trails, walkable retail. The closest Las Vegas equivalent to Pleasanton, Danville, or Cupertino.

If you're coming from LA / Orange County: Henderson or Green Valley. The vibe is suburban SoCal — good weather, good dining, good schools. MacDonald Highlands scratches the Calabasas itch for luxury buyers.

If you're coming from San Diego: Summerlin West or Skye Canyon. Mountain views, newer construction, outdoor access. You'll feel at home.

If you want the most house for your money: Spring Valley or North Las Vegas. Entry points well below the valley median, strong rental markets if you keep the California property.

What's Different About Buying in Nevada vs. California

  • No transfer tax in Nevada — California charges up to 1.1% of the sale price. Nevada charges nothing at the state level (small county recording fee only).
  • HOA rules are real — Most Las Vegas communities have HOAs. Review the CC&Rs before you fall in love with a home. Some prohibit short-term rentals, certain paint colors, parking RVs, etc.
  • Escrow works similarly — Nevada uses escrow-based closings like California. The timeline (30–45 days) is comparable.
  • Inspection period is 10 days — Slightly shorter than some California contracts. Use every day of it.
  • Seller concessions are more common — In the current market, you can often negotiate seller-paid closing costs, rate buydowns, or repair credits that are harder to get in hot California markets.

Practical Moving Tips

  • Establish Nevada residency as soon as possible — change your driver's license and voter registration within 30 days of moving to lock in the tax benefits
  • Get a Nevada driver's license before tax season to prove domicile if California FTB questions your move
  • Utility setup is easy — NV Energy for power, Southwest Gas for gas, multiple internet providers available
  • Summer heat is real — budget for higher electric bills June through September, and look for homes with good insulation and a west-facing garage (or avoid it)

I Specialize in California Relocations

A significant portion of my clients are coming from California. I know the comparison points — the neighborhoods, the schools, the lifestyle trade-offs. I can do full virtual showings and help you close on a home before you even arrive, if needed.

Planning a Move from California?

Let's talk through your timeline, budget, and which neighborhoods make the most sense for your lifestyle. Free consultation — I work with out-of-state buyers all the time.

Talk to William