West LA equity goes a long way in Simi Valley - more home, more land, a strong school district, and (for eligible owners) the ability to keep your property-tax base via Prop 19.
What the move offers
Buyers coming from Santa Monica and the broader Westside typically trade density and price for space, newer/larger homes, and value. Simi Valley is known for its Simi Valley Unified schools, low crime reputation, parks and open space, and a calmer pace - while staying within reach of the West Valley and, via the 118, the broader LA area.
The Prop 19 advantage (in-state move)
California's Proposition 19 can let eligible homeowners - those who are 55 or older, severely and permanently disabled, or victims of a wildfire or natural disaster - transfer the taxable (base-year) value of their primary home to a replacement primary home anywhere in California (the 55+/disabled categories may use it up to three times). Confirm eligibility with the California Board of Equalization and a tax professional. For a longtime Westside owner with a low Prop 13 base, carrying that base to a Simi Valley home can mean a much smaller property-tax bill than a fresh market-value assessment.
Taxes on your sale
Federal law lets you exclude up to $250,000 of gain (single) or $500,000 (married filing jointly) on the sale of a main home if you meet the ownership and use tests (IRS Publication 523). Gains above the exclusion are taxable, so a long-held, highly-appreciated California home can still carry a sizable taxable gain - consult a CPA.
The Simi Valley market
The canonical Simi Valley median home price is $897,450 (data.json). I help Westside buyers tour remotely, compare neighborhoods (Wood Ranch, Big Sky, Bridle Path equestrian), and run the Prop 19 timing with their CPA. See also: Simi Valley real estate.