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Economy of California

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Economy of California
Los Angeles, the largest city in California
Statistics
Population39,529,000 (2025) [1]
GDP$4.048 trillion (2024)[2]
GDP per capita
$102,662 (2024)[3]
Population below poverty line
11.8% (Official)[4]
17.7% (Supplemental)[5]
Labor force
19,851,300 (September 2025)[6]
Unemployment5.5% (Aug. 2025)[7]
Public finances
Revenues$195.73 billion (2022-23)
Expenses$286.4 billion (2022-23)[8]
The 2021 California economy compared to the rest of U.S. and other countries, showing the larger economies in nominal GDP terms
  California unemployment rate, 1976–2024
  US unemployment rate

The economy of the State of California is the largest in the United States, with a $4.048 trillion gross state product (GSP) as of 2024.[2] It is the largest sub-national economy in the world. If California were an independent nation, it would rank as the fourth largest economy in the world in nominal terms, behind Germany and ahead of Japan.

California's Silicon Valley is home to some of the world's most valuable technology companies, including Apple, Alphabet, and Nvidia.[9] As of June 2025, 58 of the Fortune 500 companies are headquartered in California.[10]

As both the most populous US state and one of the most climatologically diverse states, the economy of California is varied, with many sizable sectors. The most dominant of these sectors include finance, business services, government and manufacturing. Much of the economic activity is concentrated in the coastal cities, especially Los Angeles, which has a relative focus on media—most notably Hollywood—and the San Francisco Bay Area, which predominantly concentrates on technology. Both cities, along with other major ports such as San Diego, also act as significant trade hubs to and from the United States. Furthermore, California's agriculture industry has the highest output of any U.S. state, with its Central Valley being one of the most productive agricultural regions on Earth, growing over half the country's fruits, vegetables, and nuts.[11] Droughts in California are affecting business and industry in addition to agriculture.[12]

GDP by county

[edit]

This list shows nominal gross domestic product (GDP) by county in millions of US$, in 2022.

California counties by GDP 2021 (chained 2012 US$)
Rank
(2022)
County GDP
(million US$)[13]
1 Los Angeles
913,292.121
2 Santa Clara
400,777.502
3 Orange
314,177.082
4 San Diego
295,644.871
5 San Francisco
252,186.339
6 San Mateo
177,912.200
7 Alameda
168,506.397
8 San Bernardino
122,548.771
9 Sacramento
116,260.531
10 Riverside
115,363.850
11 Contra Costa
94,802.099
12 Ventura
62,328.544
13 Kern
57,540.870
14 Fresno
55,426.932
15 San Joaquin
40,227.907
16 Sonoma County
36,876.932
17 Santa Barbara
36,081.257
18 Marin
35,697.807
19 Solano
35,407.753
20 Monterey
33,248.856
21 Stanislaus
28,673.725
22 Tulare
22,794.238
23 San Luis Obispo
21,712.946
24 Santa Cruz
19,175.929
25 Yolo
18,735.314
26 Napa
13,165.651
27 Merced
11,560.438
28 Butte
11,077.391
29 Imperial
11,064.218
30 Shasta
9,920.685
31 El Dorado
9,876.986
32 Kings
8,145.669
33 Madera
7,737.581
34 Humboldt
6,843.306
35 Nevada
5,392.918
36 Sutter
4,840.246
37 Mendocino
4,277.135
38 Yuba
3,767.920
39 Tuolumne
2,884.009
40 San Benito
2,735.746
41 Tehama
2,516.858
42 Lake
2,273.787
43 Siskiyou
2,007.673
44 Amador
1,920.935
45 Colusa
1,780.929
46 Calaveras
1,641.639
47 Inyo
1,354.674
48 Mono
1,311.754
49 Lassen
1,297.714
50 Glenn
1,248.681
51 Plumas
1,121.249
52 Del Norte
947.225
53 Mariposa
849.397
54 Modoc
579.842
55 Trinity
465.968
56 Alpine
117.412
57 Sierra
114.332
California
3,660,415.700

History

[edit]

California has experienced waves of migration in the past. Once the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo of 1848 was coercively signed with Mexico, the US acquired the future states of California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico as well as the independent territory of Texas the newly acquired territories underwent rapid and extensive development. In 1847, California was controlled (with much difficulty due to deserters leaving to look for gold) by a U.S. Army-appointed military governor and an inadequate force of a little over 600 troops. After the finding of extensive gold deposits in California, the California gold rush started in 1848. Commerce and economic activity in California initially centered around the vastly expanded cities of San Francisco, San Jose, and Sacramento as they scrambled to supply the hordes of gold miners. Meanwhile, Los Angeles initially remained a less populated settlement with fewer than 5,000 residents.

Prior to 1850, the government was judged inadequate and poorly run, and statehood status was sought to start trying to remedy this problem. Due to the California Gold Rush, by 1850 California had grown to have a non-Indian and non-Californio population (about 7,000 Californios were residing in California in 1850) of over 110,000.[14] Despite a major conflict in the U.S. Congress on the number of slave versus non-slave states, the large, rapid and continuing California population gains and the large amount of gold being exported east gave California enough clout to choose its own extensive boundaries, elect its representatives and senators, write its Constitution, and be admitted to the Union as a free state in 1850 without going through territorial status as required for most other new states.

Soon after gaining statehood in 1850, the state required and paid through taxes for nearly universal elementary school education. Other private schools were founded and are still doing well. In the 1930s California was a leader in the high school movement to educate students beyond elementary school. State-subsidized college educations have a long history in California as well as many private elementary, middle, high schools, colleges and universities. There are three public funded higher education systems in the state: the California State University (CSU) (founded 1857), the University of California (UC) system (founded 1868), and the California Community College System (CCCS) founded in 1967. CSU is the largest university system in the United States.[15] CSU has 23 campuses and eight off-campus centers enrolling 437,000 students with 44,000 faculty members and staff,[16] The University of California was founded in 1868 in Berkeley as a state supported university. As of fall 2011, the University of California has 10 campuses, a combined student body of 234,464 students, 18,896 faculty members, 189,116 staff members, and over 1,600,000 living alumni.[17] The California Community College System consisting of 112 community colleges in 72 community college districts in California has over 1,800,000 students. California also has an extensive private college system of over 133 colleges and universities including California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and Stanford University. (See: List of colleges and universities in California)

About half the settlers coming to California after 1846 came by the wagon trains on the California Trail (a trip of about 140–160 days). The other half came by sea via paddle steamers going to and from the Isthmus of Panama or Nicaragua (about a 40+ day trip). The building of the Panama Railroad in 1855 made this a much more used route especially for passengers. The other main sailing ship route was going around Cape Horn, about a 120-day (via Clippers) or 200 day trip by regular sailing ship. Nearly all freight to California till 1869 took this long route around South America—shipping by ship has nearly always been relatively slow but cheap. Overland shipping was too difficult and took too long for nearly all cargo. The First Transcontinental Telegraph replaced the Pony Express in 1861 and established the first rapid communication with the east coast. The First transcontinental railroad was completed across the future states of Nebraska, Wyoming, Utah and the new states of Nevada (est. 1864) and California in 1869 and cut this trip to about 7 days. This rail link tied California and the rest of the Pacific states firmly into the union and led to much more rapid and profitable commerce between the states. In 1886 the first refrigerated cars on the Southern Pacific Railroad entered operation. The loading of such cars with oranges, at Los Angeles on February 14, 1886, started an economic boom in the citrus industry of Southern California, by making deliveries of perishable fruits and vegetables to the eastern United States possible.[citation needed]

Early farming in the state was primarily concentrated near the coast, and the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta in the Central Valley. Winter wheat was an early crop that grew well without irrigation if planted in the fall and harvested in the spring. By the 1880s extensive grape fields for producing wine were being planted in many areas in California. Many of the vine stock originally came from France and other parts of Europe. Starting in the late 1880s, Chinese workers and other laborers were used to construct hundreds of miles of levees throughout the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta's waterways in an effort to control flooding, reclaim and preserve flooded land that could be converted into farmland. This area now often grows extensive rice crops. Subsequent irrigation projects have brought many more parts of the Central Valley into productive agriculture use. The Central Valley Project, formed in 1935 to redistribute water from northern California to the Central valley and Southern California helped develop more of the Central Valley. Water for agricultural and municipal purposes was captured in the spring from snow melt in the Sierra Nevada (U.S.) and stored for later irrigation use with an extensive system of dams and canals. The even larger California State Water Project was formed in the 1950s, consisting of the California Aqueduct and its ancillary dams. The California Aqueduct, developed at the cost of several billion dollars, helps store and transport water from the Feather River Basin to agricultural and municipal users statewide. The Colorado River Aqueduct delivers water from the Colorado River to the Imperial Valley of California area and since 1905 the Los Angeles Aqueduct delivers water over from the Owens Valley to the city of Los Angeles. One of the state's most acute problems is its appetite for water. In the extensive fields of the Imperial Valley, irrigation is facilitated in part by the All-American Canal—part of the Colorado River Aqueduct project. Cutbacks in federally funded water projects in the 1970s and 80s led many cities to begin buying water from areas with a surplus; but political problems associated with water distribution continue. Ongoing challenges to develop a long-term plan to end surplus water withdrawals from the Colorado led the federal government to stop the release of surplus river water to the state in 2003.

Orange Grove outside of Santa Paula

Agriculture is one of the prominent elements of the state's economy: California leads the nation in the production of fruits, vegetables, wines and nuts. The state's most valuable crops are cannabis,[18] nuts, grapes, cotton, flowers, and oranges. California produces the major share of U.S. domestic wine. Dairy products contribute the single largest share of farm income. California's farms are highly productive as a result of good soil, a long growing season, the use of modern agricultural methods and extensive irrigation. Irrigation is critical since the long dry summers would not allow most crops to grow here--California Indians had almost no agriculture because of this. Extensive and expensive irrigation systems including furrow "gravity" irrigation, sprinkler and drip irrigation systems have been developed to supply the extensive irrigation needs of California.[19] Illegal immigration to the United States has been traditionally drawn to the state, in part, because corporations face intense pressure to control labor costs by using illegal means to harvest California's extensive crops.

Top 30 publicly traded companies
in California for 2022

according to revenues
with State and U.S. rankings
State Corporation US
1 Apple 4
2 Alphabet 8
3 Chevron 10
4 Meta 31
5 Wells Fargo 47
6 Disney 48
7 Intel 62
8 HP Inc. 63
9 TD Synnex 64
10 Cisco 82
11 Qualcomm 98
12 Broadcom 123
13 Molina 126
14 Uber 127
15 Netflix 129
16 Salesforce 133
17 Visa 137
18 PayPal 148
19 Gilead Sciences 150
20 Nvidia 152
21 Amgen 154
22 Applied Materials 155
23 AMD 167
24 PG&E 180
25 Western Digital 221
26 Ross 223
27 Adobe 233
28 Block 234
29 Lam Research 240
30 Edison 241
Further information:
List of California companies

Source: Fortune/Patch[20]

California's location along the Pacific coast and its rapidly growing population initially led to the constructions of major seaports at San Francisco in the San Francisco Bay area and inland ports at Sacramento, etc. The first paddle steamer, the SS California, arrived in the port of San Francisco on February 28, 1849,[21] with over 400 passengers trying to get to the gold rush territory. It left New York City October 6, 1848, before the gold discoveries were verified and the gold rush truly started. Shipment of passengers and freight to Sacramento was accomplished by off-loading the cargoes and passengers onto paddle steamers for transit up the Sacramento River to Sacramento, Stockton, etc. As the population spread out and grew ports were established up and down the California coast with other major ports in Long Beach, Los Angeles and San Diego. The largest U.S. Naval base on the west coast is now in San Diego. (See: Maritime history of California for more information.) The state's shipping industry evolved to handle cargoes to and from California to Europe and the eastern United States and help support the growing international trade with South America, Asia and Oceania. During World War II, numerous military bases and various wartime industries were quickly established in the state to support the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Ocean fleets—ships could use the Panama Canal to get from ocean to ocean. California led in the number of merchant ships built at the Kaiser shipyards in Richmond and the Los Angeles areas. Mare Island Naval Shipyard (now closed) in the San Francisco Bay built submarines as well as repaired many of the ships used by the U.S. Navy Pacific Fleet in World War II. The rapidly growing California aircraft industries was greatly expanded. Since then these defense connected industries have largely closed down or moved to cheaper areas in the U.S.

With Thomas Edison's invention of the Kinetoscope (early movie camera) in 1894, California would become a leader when "talkies" were introduced in the sound film movie industry. The idea of combining motion pictures with recorded sound is nearly as old as film itself, but because of the technical challenges involved, synchronized dialogue was only made practical in the late 1920s with the perfection of the Audion amplifier tube and the introduction of the Vitaphone system. After the release of The Jazz Singer in 1927, "talkies" became more and more commonplace. Within a decade, popular widespread production of silent films had ceased. Cheap land, good year-round climate and large natural spaces prompted the growing film industry to begin migrating to Southern California in the early part of the 20th century. The film patent wars of the early 20th century actually led to the spread of film companies across the U.S. Many worked with equipment for which they did not own the patent rights, and thus filming in New York was "dangerous"; it was too close to Edison's company headquarters, and to his agents which the company sent out to seize "illegal" cameras. By 1912, most major film companies had set up movie production facilities in Southern California near or in Los Angeles because of the region's favorable year-round weather and the rapidly growing supply of "talent" both before and behind the cameras.[22] Since the 1920s California continues to be a major U.S. center for motion-picture shows, television shows, cartoons, and related entertainment industries, especially in Hollywood and Burbank areas.

Since 1945, manufacturing of electronic equipment, computers, machinery, transportation equipment, and metal products, has increased rapidly while aircraft and naval construction has largely ceased. Stanford University, its affiliates, and graduates played a major role in the development of California's electronics and high-tech industry.[23] From the 1890s, Stanford University's leaders saw its mission as leading the development of the West and shaped the school accordingly. Regionalism helped align Stanford's interests with those of the Stanford area's high-tech firms for the first fifty years of Silicon Valley's development.[24] During the 1940s and 1950s, Frederick Terman, as Stanford's dean of engineering and provost, encouraged faculty and graduates to start their own companies. He is credited with nurturing Hewlett-Packard, Varian Associates, Fairchild Semiconductor, Intel Corporation and later other high-tech firms such as Apple Inc., Google, etc. in what would become Silicon Valley that grew up around the Stanford campus. Despite the development of other high-tech economic centers throughout the United States and the world, Silicon Valley continues to be a leading hub for high-tech innovation and development, accounting for one-third of all of the venture capital investment in the United States.[25] Geographically, Silicon Valley encompasses all of the Santa Clara Valley, the southern Peninsula, and the southern East Bay. A number of high-tech companies and small low-tech, often low-wage, companies are also located in Southern California.

Tourism is also an important part of California's economy. Yosemite National Park was established in 1890, followed by nine other national parks and seashores,[26] as well as various other protected areas across California. Disneyland, established in 1955, and other theme parks draw millions of visitors each year.

California also pioneered numerous innovations in retailing during the mid-20th century, particularly fast food restaurants and credit cards. Nationwide fast food chains A&W Restaurants (1919), McDonald's (1940), Taco Bell (1961), and Panda Express (1983) were all founded in California. Visa Inc. (originally BankAmericard) was born from a 1958 experiment by Bank of America in Fresno, while MasterCard (originally Master Charge) was formed as the Interbank Card Association in 1966 by a group of California banks to compete against BankAmericard.

If the state were considered separately, it would rank as the fifth largest economy in the world, behind rest of the United States, China, Japan, and Germany as of 2017. The state recently overtook the United Kingdom to take the fifth spot. The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis reported that California's GDP was $2.751 trillion in 3rd quarter 2017.[27]

Sectors

[edit]
California GDP by Sector (2025)[28]

California's largest sector by GDP in 2025 is Information at $538 billion dollars. The second and third largest sectors by GDP are Real Estate ($460 billion) and Professional Services ($391 billion).[28] The Information sector includes some of the nation's largest technology and entertainment companies like Apple, Meta, Disney, and HP.[29]

The largest employer in California is Government, with 2,705,400 employees in August 2025 which includes state and local employees.[30]

California Employment by Sector (2025)[28]

The largest single employer is the University of California at 272,437 employees[31], followed by the state government at 247,446 employees.[32]

California's largest sector by employees is Healthcare at 2.6 million employees, followed by Retail Trade (2.5 million employees) and Professional Services (2.1 million employees).[28]

International trade and tourism

[edit]
Tourists at Yosemite Falls

California has historically derived significant revenue from international trade and tourism. However, the state's share of America's merchandise export trade has been steadily shrinking since 2000, from 15.4% to 11.1% in 2008.[33] The exports of goods made in California totaled $134 billion in 2007. $48 billion of that total was computers and electronics, followed by transportation, non-electrical machinery, agriculture, and chemicals. California trade and exports translate into high-paying jobs for over one million Californians. According to the US Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), in 2005, foreign-controlled companies employed 542,600 California workers, the most of any state. Major sources of foreign investment in California in 2005 were Japan, the United Kingdom, Switzerland, France, and Germany. Foreign investmandand in California was responsible for 4.6 percent of the state's total private-industry employment in 2009.[34] Total direct travel spending in California reached $96.7 billion in 2008, a 0.8% increase over the preceding year.[35] Los Angeles County receives the most tourism in the state.[35]

Information

[edit]

As of 2022, there were 21,758 California firms in the Information sector with a total annual sales of $670 billion and an annual payroll of $182 billion.[36]

Software Publishing

[edit]

Major software publishers (per the NAICS industry classification system used by the US Office of Management and Budget) with headquarters in the state include Apple, HP, Intel, QUALCOMM, Block (formerly Square), and Adobe.[29]

Apple Inc., headquartered in Cupertino and with over 164,000 employees worldwide, was the first company to be valued at over $1 trillion.[37] Today the company is valued at $3.6 trillion[38] and has an annual sales revenue of $391 billion.[29] Apple's current corporate headquarters, called Apple Park, opened in 2017 and houses more than 12,000 employees.[39] In July 2025, Apple announced a $500 million partnership with the owner of Mountain Pass mine in the Mojave Desert, MP Materials, to secure a US-based source of rare earth metals like neodymium.[40]

HP Inc., headquartered in Palo Alto, is best known for its line of personal computers and printers. Today the company has 58,000 employees[41] and an annual sales revenue of $53.5 billion.[29] In 2025, HP Inc. announced layoffs of 4,000 to 6,000 jobs after a slump in consumer PC sales.[42] The last layoff was in 2019 when the company cut 7,000 to 9,000 jobs.[42]

Intel, headquartered in Santa Clara, is a microprocessor manufacturer with over 109,000 employees[43] worldwide at the end of 2024 and an annual sales revenue of $53.1 billion.[29] Intel plans to layoff over 500 California employees[44] as part of CEO Lip-Bu Tan's effort to rightsize the company by cutting up to 20% of its workforce.[45]

Qualcomm, headquartered in San Diego, is a wireless technology manufacturer with approximately 49,000 employees[46] worldwide and an annual sales revenue of $38.9 billion.[29] Qualcomm is a leading market player of 5G millimeter wave technology.[47]

Block, Inc. (formerly Square, Inc.) is best known for its point-of-sale system Square and its digital wallet Cash App.[48] The company employs approximately 11,000 employees[49] and has an annual sales revenue of $24.1 billion.[29] The company was formerly headquartered in San Francisco and now has no official headquarters[50], although its largest offices are located in Oakland.[51]

Adobe Inc. is a software company headquartered in San Jose and best known for its image editing software Adobe Photoshop and its PDF editor Acrobat Reader. Adobe has approximately 30,000 employees[52] and an annual sales revenue $21.5 billion.[29]

Agriculture

[edit]

Compared to other states, California has a large agriculture industry (including fruit, vegetables, dairy, and wine production),[53][54] The total economic contribution is likely more than double this value (see below). Airborne exports of perishable fruits and vegetables amounted to approximately $579 million in 2007.[55] By way of comparison, California exported more agricultural products by air that year than 23 other states did by all modes of transport.[55] Its agriculture is somewhat dependent on illegal immigrants.[56]

According to the California Department of Food and Agriculture, "California agriculture is a $42.6 billion dollar industry that generates at least $100 billion in related economic activity."[57] The state's agricultural sales first exceeded $30 billion in 2004,[53] making it more than twice the size of any other state's agriculture industry.

The state's almond industry produces the most export value of any farm product, with $4.5 billion in foreign sales in 2016.[58] Dairy and dairy products ranked second to almonds with a total export value of $1.42 billion, a 24 percent increase over 2010.[59] California leads the United States in strawberry production; due to its optimal climate and productive soil, the state is the source of over 80% of the nation's strawberry harvest.[60]

Energy

[edit]

Oil drilling has played a significant role in the development of the state. There have been major strikes in the Bakersfield, Long Beach, Los Angeles areas and off the California coast.

Solar power in California is also a large employer in the state. There are over 43,000 Californians working in the solar industry,[61] primarily around the San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles, San Diego, and the Central Valley.

Personal income

[edit]

Per capita income was $88,447 in 2025, ranking 4th in the nation after D.C., Connecticut, and Massachusetts.[62]

Real Median Household Income in California

According to the United States Census Bureau, in 2024 the median household income was $100,149 and the median earnings for full-time, year-round workers was $69,440.[63][64] This is an increase of 24.5% for household income and 32.1% for earnings for full-time, year-round workers compared to 2019. The national median household income was $81,604. An estimated 21% of Californian households earn more than $200,000 annually.[63][64]

The counties in California with the highest household incomes are Santa Clara ($168.2k), San Mateo ($160.7k), and Marin ($147.0k) counties.[63] The counties with the lowest household incomes are Lake ($51.4k), Humboldt ($58.1k), and Imperial ($60.7k) counties.[63]

Despite having one of the highest median incomes in the nation, Californian households struggle with a high cost of living. California electricity rates are the second-highest in the country and households with incomes under 200% of the Federal Poverty Level typical pay about 4.4% of their annual income on electricity bills.[65]

California has a high income gap. In 2023, the highest-earning families earned an average of $336,000 while the lowest-earning families earned just $30,000.[66] Only D.C. and Louisiana had wider income gaps.[66]

Poverty

[edit]

An estimated 11.8% of Californians live below the official poverty level in 2025.[67] The Supplemental Poverty Rate was 17.7% in 2024.[68] An estimated 13.5% of Californian households received food stamps in 2025.[69]

Although California doesn't stand out from other states for the official poverty measure (ranked #23 highest in 2023), it's tied for highest with Louisiana for the supplemental poverty measure, primarily due to the high cost of living.[70]

Taxes

[edit]

Taxes in California are collected by state and local governments through a number of tax categories. In total, for fiscal year 2022, California state and local governments together collected an average of $10,319 per capita from residents[71], the third highest per capita collections in the nation with the nationwide average being $7,109.[72]

State personal income tax, and corporate franchise and income tax are administered and collected by the California Franchise Tax Board. The California Department of Tax and Fee Administration (CDTFA) administers more than 30 tax and fee programs, including sales & use taxes.[73]

2024 Federal Tax Collections from California (in billions)[74]
2022 2023 2024
Federal Income & Payroll Tax $601.7 $504.6 $630.9
Corporate Income Tax $77.4 $52.4 $154.0
Excise Tax $5.8 $4.2 $8.3
Trust Tax $6.1 $2.0 $5.1
Estate Tax $4.4 $4.5 $4.5
Gift Tax $0.7 $0.1 $1.4
Unemployment Tax $0.8 $1.1 $1.3
TOTAL $696.8 $569.0 $805.7
State Tax Collections Total Taxes for California[75]

In 2022, California's state and local combined tax revenues were $702.9 billion, or $17,955 per capita. Nationally, per capita revenues were $13,619.[76]

2020-2024 California State Tax Collections (in millions)[77]
2020 2021 2022 2023 2024
Property Taxes $3.1 $3.4 $3.0 $3.4 $3.6
Sales and Gross Receipts Taxes $63.6 $64.4 $71.7 $72.5 $74.1
License Taxes $12.0 $13.6 $13.4 $13.3 $15.0
Income Taxes $94.2 $172.4 $192.2 $126.3 $164.5
Other Taxes $0.1 $1.3 $2.6 $2.2 $8.4
TOTAL $173.0 $254.8 $282.9 $217.7 $265.6

The state and local tax burden in 2022, which is the state and local taxes paid by a state's residents divided by that state's share of net national product, was 13.5% for California (11.2% national average), 5th highest in the nation. California has had the 4th or 5th highest tax burden by this metric from 2019 to 2022.[78]

However, breaking out the tax burden by income brackets reveals a different story. The lowest 20% bracket of family income paid an effective tax rate of 11.7% in California compared to the national average of 11.4%, and large states like Texas (12.8%) and Florida (13.2%). The next 20% income bracket of family income paid an effective tax rate of 10.3% in California compared to the national average of 10.4%, and Texas (11.2%) and Florida (10.9%).[79] According to the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, in 2024 California had the 5th least regressive state and local tax system, after D.C., Minnesota, Vermont, and New York.[80]

California Single Filer Tax Rate Schedules 2024[81]
Taxable Income Rate
$0 - $10,756 1.00%
$10,756 - $25,499 2.00%
$25,499 - $40,245 4.00%
$40,245 - $55,866 6.00%
$55,866 - $70,606 8.00%
$70,606 - $360,659 9.30%
$360,659 - $432,787 10.30%
$432,787 - $721,314 11.30%
$721,314 - $1,000,000 12.30%
$1,000,000+ 13.30%

California's top income tax is technically 12.3%, however there's a 1% mental health services tax surcharge on taxable income over $1 million, bringing the effective rate to 13.3%.[82] The 2024 standard deduction was $5,540 for single filers and $11,080 for married filing jointly.[83]

The 8.4 percent "average" sales tax assessed by the state and local governments of California is one of the highest in the nation and varies by city and county from a low of 7.25% to 10.0%. Food, prescription drugs and services are exempt from sales tax — about one-third of all purchases have sales tax applied to them. Sales taxes are collected by the state, which re-allocates them to the various counties, cities, districts, etc. The basic statewide sales and use tax rate is 7.25% and is divided as follows: 6.50% State, 0.75% plus a 0.25% local transportation fund to city or county of place of sale (distributed quarterly). All taxes above 7.25% are so called "district taxes" which are imposed locally, after an area wide vote, under the Transactions and Use Tax Law. Local, voter approved, sales tax rate increases have resulted in higher sales tax rates in various California locations. Sales taxes imposed for general governmental purposes are subject to simple majority approval. Sales taxes imposed for specific purposes like transportation are subject to two-thirds voter approval.[84]

Used cars have a 7.25% to 10.0% sales tax applied to the used car purchase price. This sales tax is applied to all new and used car, planes, and boats purchased even if they are purchased out of state. In addition to having a clear title, a passed smog and emission inspection on the vehicle plus proof of insurance are needed before a car can be registered. New residents to California are required to register their vehicles within 20 days of establishing residency. A department of motor vehicle (DMV) employee will perform a physical inspection of the vehicle and verify the vehicle identification number (VIN) before one receives a California registration certificate, license plates and correct yearly registration stickers for the vehicle. State and local government vehicles are exempt from paying fees and are issued "exempt" license plates.

California vehicle license fees are 0.65% of depreciated vehicle's value. These fees are applied annually. Licenses are renewed in the month the vehicle was originally registered and have a yearly sticker applied to them after paying the registration fee to show fee payment.

The 8.84% state corporate income flat tax rate is the highest in the west and one of the highest in the nation. Banks and financials have a 10.84% flat tax applied to their profits. The S corporation rate is 1.5% while S corporation bank and financial rate is 3.5%.[85]

California property tax rates are ranked 17th highest in the nation[86] having been capped by the Proposition 13 overwhelmingly passed in 1978. Property taxes in California amounted to over $54.0 billion (2011) and are one of the largest taxes in California of which about $12.0 billion of the $54.0 billion collected was for voter approved "extras".[87] The property tax, despite being used primarily to finance local governments, has a significant effect on the state budget. The state's convoluted education finance system equalizes school district property tax revenue for K–12 districts by using the state's general funds collected mostly from income and sales taxes to provide 20 percent or more extra "supplemental" funding to high-poverty districts through the Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF), in addition to the state-mandated "basic aid" funding.[88]

Property in California, when sold, is assessed at 100% of full cash value. Under Proposition 13, the maximum amount of tax on real estate in California is limited to 1.0% plus local voter-approved surcharges for "extras". Revenues from these "extra" taxes are used primarily to repay general obligation bonds issued for local infrastructure projects such as school district surcharges for rehabilitation of school facilities or building new buildings. These extras may also include: water districts, sidewalk maintenance, flood control, and street lighting. The state also has statewide property taxes collected and used by the state on privately owned railroad cars and timber. The statewide average property tax is about 1.26% of assessed value but can range from about 1.03% to nearly 2.0% in some cities and counties. Proposition 13 limits property tax assessment increases to 2.0% of previously assessed value or the inflation rate over the previous year, whichever is lower. Because property prices have increased in California faster than 2.0%, on average, older properties are taxed at "effective" rates that are lower than newly sold properties.[89] This feature was put in the Proposition 13 language to encourage people to stay put in their residences longer.[90] Property taxes were allocated as follows: counties 17%, cities 10%, schools (school districts and community colleges) 54%, and special districts 19%. In 2013 the state legislature abolished special districts. Intangible personal property, personal effects, business inventory property held for resale are exempt from property taxes. A principal residence qualifies for a $7,000 homestead reduction in the taxable value of their property. Property owned by governments, non-profit hospitals, religious institutions, and charitable organizations—are exempt from the 1.0% property tax rate.

In California gasoline is taxed at $0.719/gallon and diesel at $0.749/gallon—these are the highest gas and diesel taxes in the nation. The state legislature switched its gas taxation system in 2010 so it could re-appropriate some of the gas and diesel tax money from road maintenance to other areas of the state budget which was in deficit.[91] Since they re-purposed much of the state and federal fuel taxes there are now complaints that there is not enough money in the transportation funds to do all the required highway upgrades and maintenance.

Cigarette excise taxes in California are $2.87/pack. The federal excise tax on cigarettes is an additional $1.01 making the total excise taxes on a package of cigarettes $3.88/pack. Because excise taxes are "hidden" (not listed separately) the price of the cigarettes plus the excise tax have a 7.25% to 10.0% sales tax added to the purchase price—a tax on a tax.

California alcoholic beverage taxes varies by beverage, from 20¢ per gallon of wine or beer to $6.60 per gallon of spirits (over 100 proof).

The unemployment insurance rate, paid by the employer, is experienced based and averages about 1.0%–6.0% of the first $7,000 of worker's income—employers with high turnovers pay more. The federal unemployment insurance rate (now)[when?] is 6.2% of the first $7,000 of a worker's income. The Great Recession resulted in a high unemployment rate, causing California to borrow about $10 billion from the federal government.

The Employment Training Tax (ETT) rate for 2014 is 0.1 percent on the first $7,000 per employee per calendar year.

The State Disability Insurance (SDI) withholding rate for 2014 is 1.0 percent up to a salary limit of $101,636 income—maximum disability tax for each employee is $1,016.36.[92]

Housing

[edit]

According to the United States Census Bureau's 2024 American Community Survey, there are an estimated 14,877,017 housing units in California, of which 13,797,638, or about 92.7% are estimated to be occupied; this is above the national average rate of occupation of 90.5%.[93] There are an estimated 8,444,064 single-family homes. Most housing units in California (52.1%) were built earlier than 1980.[93]

Housing Inventory: Median Listing Price in California (US Dollars)

An estimated 7,701,876 housing units are owner-occupied, or about 55.8%, which is 9.5% below the national average. An estimated 6,095,762 housing units are renter-occupied.[93] The median home value in California is $759,500, and the median mortgage is $3301 which is $966 above the national average. The median rent is $2104 which is $617 above the national average.[93]

An estimated 61.7% of housing units in California have 2 or more vehicles.[93] Most housing units are heated with utility gas (60.6%) or electricity (30.1%).[93]

In 2023, California as a whole had a moderately cost-burdened renter rate of 54.1% and a severely cost-burdened renter rate of 29.2%, where moderately and severely cost-burdened means households pay more than 30% and 50% of their income for housing, respectively.[94] The moderately cost-burdened renter rate for the entire US was 49.5%.[94]

1920s Californian Bungalow style home

The Los Angeles–Long Beach combined statistical area (CSA) had a moderately cost-burdened renter rate of 56.4%, and the San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland CSA had a rate of 47.5%.[94]

In 2023, the California metropolitan area with the highest median single-family home price is San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara at $2,020,000, followed by Anaheim-Santa Ana-Irvine at $1,450,000 and San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont at $1,320,000.[94] The median single-family home price in the US in 2024 was $412,500.[94]

The change from 2019 to 2025 in real home prices is highest in San Diego-Chula Vista-Carlsbad at 34.4%, followed by Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario at 33.3% and Bakersfield-Delano at 32.6%.[94] The change for the US as a whole was 29.0%.[94]

Housing Crisis

[edit]

This section is an excerpt from California Housing Shortage

Since about 1970, California has been experiencing an extended and increasing housing shortage[95], such that by 2018, California ranked 49th among the states of the U.S. in terms of housing units per resident.[96] In 2025, the shortage was estimated at 3 million housing units. In 2018, experts said that California needs to double its current rate of housing production (85,000 units per year) to keep up with expected population growth and prevent prices from further increasing, and needs to quadruple the current rate of housing production over the next seven years in order for prices and rents to decline.[97]

Strong economic growth created hundreds of thousands of new jobs (which increases demand for housing) while NIMBY-led restrictions stymied new housing.[97] From 2010 to 2020 statewide population grew 6.1% while housing supply rose by just 4.7%.[98] In California's coastal urban areas, (where the majority of job growth has occurred since the Great Recession), the disparity is greater: in the Bay Area, seven times as many jobs were created as housing units. By 2024, this resulted in the median price of a California home being over 2.1 times the median U.S. price.[93] As a result, less than a third of Californians can afford a median priced home (nationally, slightly more than half can)[99], 6 percentage points more residents are in poverty than would be with average housing costs (20% vs. 14%)[100], homelessness per capita is the third highest in the nation, the state's economy is suppressed by $150–400 billion annually (5-14%), and long commutes.[101]

Homelessness

[edit]

This section is an excerpt from Homelessness in California

In January 2024, at least 187,084 people were experiencing homelessness in California, according to the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development.[102] This is 0.48% of California's population, one of the highest per capita rates in the nation.[102]

California has the highest percentage of unsheltered homeless people among all U.S. states, with two-thirds of its homeless population sleeping on the streets, in encampments, or in their cars.[102] Nearly one in four homeless people in the U.S., and 45% of unsheltered homeless people, live in California.[102] Many sheltered homeless people are insecurely sheltered: 90% of homeless adults in California spent at least one night without shelter in a six-month period.[103] A statewide housing shortage drives the homelessness crisis. A 2022 study found that differences in per capita homelessness rates across the United States are not due to differing rates of mental illness, drug addiction, or poverty, but to differences in the cost of housing. West Coast cities including San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego have homelessness rates five times as high as areas with much lower housing costs like Arkansas, West Virginia, and Detroit, even though the latter locations have high burdens of opioid addiction and poverty.[104][105][106] California has the second lowest number of housing units per capita, and an estimated shortage of one million homes that are affordable to the lowest income renters. Another 2022 study found that moderate decreases in rents would significantly reduce homelessness. A 2023 study published by the University of California, San Francisco also found that the high cost of housing was the greatest obstacle to reducing homelessness.[107]

See also

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Further reading

[edit]
  • Gordon, Margaret S. Employment expansion and population growth, the California experience: 1900-1950 (1954) online
  • Kazin, Michael. "The Great Exception Revisited: Organized Labor and Politics in San Francisco and Los Angeles, 1870-1940" Pacific Historical Review (1986) 55#3 pp.371-402 JSTOR 3639704.
  • Nash, Gerald D. State government and economic development : a history of administrative policies in California, 1849-1933 (1964) online
  • Olmstead, Alan L., and Paul W. Rhode. A history of California agriculture (Giannini Foundation, 2017) ). online
  • Orsi, Richard J. "Railroads in the History of California and the Far West: An Introduction." California History 70.1 (1991): 2-11. JSTOR 25158549
  • Paul, Rodman W. "The Beginnings of Agriculture in California: Innovation vs. Continuity." California Historical Quarterly 52.1 (1973): 16-27. JSTOR 25157414
  • Pincetl, Stephanie S. Transforming California: A political history of land use and development (JHU Press, 2003)
  • Rawls, J. J.; Orsi, R. J. eds. A Golden State: mining and economic development in Gold Rush California (University of California Press, 1999) .
  • Standiford, L. (2015). Water to the Angels: William Mulholland, His Monumental Aqueduct, and the Rise of Los Angeles (Illustrated edition). (Ecco).
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