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MOVING TO BEND FROM CALIFORNIA

Moving to Bend from California.

The honest version — costs, taxes, and trade-offs — from a 4th-generation Oregonian.

Most of the buyers I serve are coming from California. Some from the Bay Area, some from Los Angeles and San Diego, a steady stream from Sacramento and the Central Valley. Their situations are not the same, and the advice shouldn't be either — a Bay Area seller cashing out equity is running a completely different math problem than an inland California family watching a budget. This page is the straight talk I give California buyers before they fly out: what actually changes, what the move really costs, and where people get tripped up.

Bend vs. California — at a glance

Bend median home price
~$720K
Bay Area median
$1.2M+
Oregon sales tax
0%
OR top income tax
~9.9%
Days of sun / year
~292
Flight to SF / LA
~1.5–2 hrs

First question: which California are you leaving?

This is the single most important thing to get straight, and it's the part most relocation articles skip. "Moving from California" describes two buyers who could not be more different.

If you're selling in the Bay Area or coastal Southern California, you're almost certainly trading down in price and freeing up equity. A median Bay Area home sells for well over a million dollars; Bend's median sits around $720K. That gap is real money — it's the reason so many of these buyers arrive with cash offers and a paid-off plan. Your challenge isn't affordability, it's adjusting to a smaller market with fewer homes to choose from and learning to move at Bend's pace instead of San Francisco's.

If you're coming from Sacramento, the Central Valley, or the Inland Empire, the housing math is much tighter — sometimes a wash, occasionally more expensive. Bend is not a discount town. What you're buying is the lifestyle and the lower-density life, not a cheaper mortgage. For these buyers the honest conversation is about whether the trade-off pencils out, and it often does — just not on the price tag alone.

Knowing which bucket you're in changes the neighborhood, the budget, and the strategy. So before anything else, that's where we start.

The cost and tax reality

FactorCaliforniaBend, Oregon
Median home price~$800K statewide; $1.2M+ Bay Area~$720K
State sales tax~7.25%+ (often 9%+ local)None
State income tax (top)up to 13.3%up to ~9.9%
Property tax (effective)~0.7% (Prop 13 capped)~0.8–0.9%
Vehicle registration / smogHigher fees + smog checksLower; no smog program
The catchYou know it wellHigher income tax; not a cheap market
A note on the numbers. The figures above are general ranges to frame the decision, not a personalized projection — tax brackets, local rates, and home prices move, and your own picture depends on what you earn, spend, and buy. Before you bank on any of it, run your specific situation past an Oregon CPA. The single most common California-buyer mistake is assuming Oregon works like home; it doesn't, and the surprise usually shows up at tax time.

The headline most people miss: Oregon and California tax you in nearly opposite directions. California leans on sales tax and very high top-bracket income tax; Oregon has no sales tax at all but a meaningful income tax. Practically, a high earner who lives modestly often comes out ahead in Oregon, and a retiree living off savings tends to love the no-sales-tax setup. A two-high-income household may find the income-tax bite closer to a wash than they expected. There's no universal answer — there's only your answer. I dig into the housing-and-cost side in detail in my Bend vs. California cost-of-living breakdown.

Why California buyers move here

  • Equity goes further — especially for Bay Area and coastal SoCal sellers trading a $1.2M+ home for Bend's ~$720K median.
  • Space and pace. Trails, rivers, and Mt. Bachelor are minutes away, not a weekend expedition. The day-to-day feels slower in the way people are actually looking for.
  • Remote-work freedom. Many buyers I serve no longer need a major metro, and Bend has the airport, downtown, and healthcare to make it work.
  • Real seasons, real sun. ~292 days of sun, four genuine seasons, and a ski mountain 30 minutes up the road.
  • A town, not a suburb. Bend has its own identity — breweries, a walkable Old Mill and downtown, a strong community — without big-city sprawl.

What catches California buyers off guard

  • It's not cheap. Bend is a desirable market with its own price pressure. Inland-California buyers in particular shouldn't expect a bargain.
  • Winter is real. Snow, chains on the passes, and a slower few months. The July postcard is not the February reality.
  • Smoke season. Late summer can bring wildfire smoke for stretches. Worth understanding before you commit — see wildfire & insurance.
  • Smaller inventory. Fewer homes on the market than a big metro means moving decisively when the right one appears — after you've done the homework.
  • The income tax. No sales tax is great; the state income tax surprises high earners who didn't run the numbers.
  • Pace of the deal. Bend rewards buyers who visit twice and choose carefully, not sight-unseen Bay Area-style bidding.

Where California buyers tend to land

There's no single "California neighborhood" in Bend — the right fit tracks your priorities, not your old zip code. That said, some patterns repeat:

Westside, for views and walkability. Bay Area and coastal SoCal buyers who want newer construction, views, and a walk-to-coffee life gravitate to Awbrey Butte, NorthWest Crossing, and the newer Discovery West area. This is the premium end of town.

Family and schools. Buyers moving with kids lean toward the Old Farm District and southwest Bend, where the school catchments and family feel do the heavy lifting.

Value, without leaving town. Budget-conscious buyers look hard at southeast Bend, which offers the most home for the money inside city limits.

Resort and second-home lifestyle. Buyers chasing golf, a lock-and-leave, or a true resort setting look at Tetherow, Broken Top, and Sunriver.

The full picture is on the Bend neighborhoods map, and if you're weighing towns rather than just neighborhoods, the Central Oregon map covers Redmond, Sisters, Sunriver, and the rest.

How the move usually goes for California buyers

1

Get clear on your California math first

Before we talk neighborhoods, we figure out what your sale frees up and what the tax picture looks like on the Oregon side. This is where the "which California" question gets answered in dollars. Pair it with an Oregon CPA conversation.

2

Two visits, not one

The California buyers who land happy almost always visit twice — once to explore broadly, once to tour with a short list. Try to see Bend outside of peak July so you meet the real place. The full cadence is in my relocation guide.

3

Pre-approve with a local lender

National lenders quote rates but often underwrite Oregon properties slower. A Bend or Portland-based lender closes cleaner — and for cash Bay Area buyers, we line up proof of funds so you're a real buyer the moment you tour.

4

Offer, inspect, close — remotely if needed

Most out-of-state California buyers handle the close remotely, with one final trip or a power-of-attorney signing. Expect 30–45 days from accepted offer to keys.

5

Settle the logistics

Oregon DMV within 30 days (no smog check, which California transplants always appreciate), utilities, schools, doctors. Plan it in parallel with closing, not after, and the landing is smooth.

"I'm a 4th-generation Oregonian — not a transplant who moved here last year and started selling real estate. When a California buyer asks what winter is really like, or whether a westside premium is worth it, or how the income tax will actually hit them, they're getting the local answer, not the brochure. That's the whole job."

Common questions from California buyers

Is it cheaper to live in Bend than California?

For most California buyers, yes — but the gap is smaller than people expect and depends entirely on which California you're leaving. A Bay Area or coastal SoCal buyer almost always comes out ahead; Bend's ~$720K median versus $1.2M+ in the Bay Area frees up real equity. A buyer from inland California (Sacramento, the Central Valley, the Inland Empire) sees a much thinner gap, sometimes a wash — Bend is not cheap by national standards. Oregon also has no sales tax but an income tax up to ~9.9%, so the picture flips depending on whether you spend or earn more. Run your own numbers; averages hide the answer that applies to you.

What's the tax difference between Oregon and California?

The two states tax you in nearly opposite ways. Oregon has no sales tax at all but a state income tax topping out near 9.9%. California has sales tax around 7.25%+ (often 9%+ with local add-ons) and income tax up to 13.3% at the highest brackets. Property taxes are closer than people assume — California's are capped by Prop 13 near 0.7% of purchase price, Oregon's effective rate runs closer to 0.8–0.9%. High earners who spend modestly often save in Oregon; retirees living off after-tax savings love the no-sales-tax setup. This is general information, not tax advice — confirm with an Oregon CPA.

Why are so many Californians moving to Bend?

Lifestyle, equity, and pace, usually in that order. The buyers I serve are trading a long commute and a crowded coastline for ~300 days of sun and trails, rivers, and skiing minutes from the door. Many are cashing out California equity that buys meaningfully more home in Bend, especially Bay Area sellers. And a lot are remote workers or near-retirees who no longer need a major metro — Bend gives them a real downtown, an airport, and good healthcare without feeling like the middle of nowhere.

How far is Bend from California, and how do I get back?

Bend is roughly a 1.5–2 hour flight from most California metros. Redmond Municipal Airport (RDM), 18 miles north, flies direct to LA and San Francisco with seasonal variation. By car, the Bay Area is about 8–9 hours and the LA basin 13–15. For buyers keeping family or business ties in California, those direct RDM flights are the detail that makes the move feel workable rather than isolating.

Which Bend neighborhoods do California buyers usually choose?

It splits by what they're leaving. Bay Area and coastal SoCal buyers who want views, walkability, and newer construction gravitate to the westside — Awbrey Butte, NorthWest Crossing, and Discovery West. School- and family-focused buyers lean to the Old Farm District and southwest Bend. Value buyers look hard at southeast Bend. Resort and second-home buyers look at Tetherow, Broken Top, and Sunriver. There's no single "California neighborhood" — fit depends on your priorities, not your old zip code.

What do California buyers get wrong about moving to Bend?

The big one is assuming Bend is a cheaper version of California — it's a desirable mountain market with its own price pressure, not a bargain. The second is visiting only in July and forgetting that winter means real snow and late-summer can bring wildfire smoke. The third is treating it like a Bay Area transaction — same-week, sight-unseen offers — when Bend rewards buyers who visit twice and pick the neighborhood carefully. Treat it as a lifestyle decision first and a real estate transaction second.

Thinking about the move from California?

Grab the free relocation guide for the neighborhood-by-neighborhood breakdown and the cost-of-living math California buyers most often miss — or book a 30-minute call and we'll map your specific situation: what your California sale frees up, the tax picture, and which Bend neighborhoods actually fit, before you book a flight.