Alternate names: Documentary stamp tax, real estate transfer taxAcronym: DTT
For example, the California Documentary Transfer Tax Act allows a tax of $0.55 per $500 of property value or consideration paid. Therefore, the documentary transfer tax would be $330 if a buyer in Sacramento were to purchase a home valued at $300,000: $1.10 for every $1,000 in value. Cities can also assess fees for documentary stamps, and Sacramento charges $2.75 per $1,000 value of consideration. Therefore, a buyer would pay $825 to the city of Sacramento and the $330 transfer tax fee to the state of California, bringing the total tax bill up to $1,155.
How a Documentary Transfer Tax Works
When a property is sold, the city, county, or state tax office records the transaction and stamps the amount paid on the deed. Each publicly recorded deed has the tax stamped or embedded on its face, thus the name “documentary stamp tax.” The tax can be a way to determine how much a property was sold for, because the fee is often based on the real estate sales price. Exceptions to this tax in some areas are interspousal transfer deeds, transfers between domestic partners, transfers between family members, transfers made as gifts or as part of an estate, and certain types of quitclaim deeds in which the consideration is $1 or less. A documentary transfer tax is not collected when filing the deeds as a public record in these situations.
Do I Need to Pay a Documentary Transfer Tax?
The county transfer tax is typically paid by the seller, while the city transfer tax tends to be divided equally between the seller and the buyer. However, the seller or the buyer of the property can be liable for the documentary transfer tax. Each jurisdiction has its own local requirement for determining which party pays it. The tax is considered a buyer’s benefit because it increases the property’s cost basis. This adjustment can reduce any capital gains taxes after selling the home, if there are any. You might find the tax listed as both a credit and a debit on a closing statement. It can also be bundled with other charges, making it difficult to figure out who is paying. Of the 50 states in the U.S., there are 13 that do not charge any documentary transfer taxes.