Relocation Guide — Scottsdale & Paradise Valley
By Anne Sostman | The Scottsdale Agent | License SA718853000
Moving from California
to Scottsdale.
The Complete Guide.
Scottsdale & Paradise Valley · Executive Relocation
What to know before you go. What Scottsdale actually delivers and where to look first for executives, founders, and high-net-worth individuals making the move from California. This guide covers the financial case, the right neighborhoods for your profile, schools, infrastructure, and the practical relocation timeline so you arrive with a strategy, not a set of open questions.
— Anne Sostman | The Scottsdale Agent
Executive Relocation Specialist
Scottsdale · Paradise Valley · Arcadia
$800K–$20M+ Luxury Segment
Off-Market Access Available
Published by Anne Sostman
The Honest Picture
The Move from California
Is Not a Compromise.
It Is a Reallocation.
Of tax burden. Of commute time. Of square footage. Of the ratio between what a property costs and what the lifestyle around it delivers. The buyers who make this move well are not the ones who simply wanted out of California they are the ones who arrived in Scottsdale with a clear picture of what they were optimizing for and found that this market delivered it precisely.
The question most California buyers arrive with isn’t “will I like it?” They’ve usually visited, often own a second home here already, or have colleagues and peers who have made the move. The question is: where specifically should I be, what will I be giving up, and what do I need to know before I commit? This guide answers those questions directly for executives relocating with a job or company, for founders and entrepreneurs choosing where to base themselves, and for high-net-worth individuals who have decided that the California calculus no longer works in their favor.
Section 01
The Financial Case.
What Actually Changes.
This is almost always the first conversation, and it deserves a clear answer rather than a sales pitch. Here is what shifts materially when you move from California to Arizona and what requires qualified professional advice to execute correctly.
| Income Tax
13.3% to 2.5%.
California’s top marginal income tax rate is 13.3% the highest in the United States. Arizona moved to a flat 2.5% income tax rate in 2023. For a household earning $500,000 annually, the difference exceeds $50,000 per year. For a founder or executive with a liquidity event, the difference can be seven figures.
What to know: Arizona residency for tax purposes requires establishing domicile physical presence, documented intent to remain, and supporting evidence that Arizona is your primary home. Work with a tax attorney who specializes in state residency transitions before the triggering income event, not after.
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Property Tax
Lower Effective Rate. No Prop 13 Protection.
Arizona’s effective property tax rate averages approximately 0.5–0.7% in Scottsdale and Paradise Valley. A $3M home in Scottsdale carries approximately $15,000–$21,000 in annual property tax. A comparable new purchase in the Bay Area or Los Angeles at $3M would carry $30,000–$36,000 — and rising, without Prop 13’s protection on future increases.
What to know: California’s Prop 13 protects long-term owners with capped rate increases. When you sell and repurchase in Arizona, you start fresh but at a lower base rate with predictable, modest annual increases.
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Purchasing Power
Dramatically More Property for the Same Dollar.
$2M in Scottsdale buys a 4,000–6,000 sq ft luxury home in a guard-gated community with pool and mountain views. $2M in Los Angeles or the Bay Area buys a mid-range single-family home in a desirable ZIP code, often needing updates. $4M–$6M in Scottsdale reaches Silverleaf, Paradise Valley, and estate-level properties that have no California equivalent below $10M–$15M.
What to know: This differential is the single most consistently underestimated advantage of the California-to-Scottsdale move and the one that becomes most viscerally clear once a California buyer begins a serious property search here.
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Section 02
What You Gain.
What You Trade.
The most useful version of this conversation is the honest one. The California-to-Scottsdale move delivers material advantages that are real and durable. It also involves genuine trade-offs that matter to some buyers significantly and not at all to others. Know which category you are in before you commit.
Section 03
Where to Live.
California Buyers by Profile.
Not all of Scottsdale is the same market, and not every neighborhood suits every California buyer profile. Here is where different relocation profiles tend to land and the reasoning behind each.
| Profile One
The Executive Relocating for Work or Company
Relocating because the company is moving, joining a Phoenix-area employer, or because the tax environment has made Arizona the right base for the next chapter. Has owned in Bel Air, Atherton, Pacific Palisades, or comparable addresses. Arrives with high standards already formed and applies them immediately. Not looking for potential looking for a property that already is what they need it to be.
Where they typically land: Paradise Valley for the definitive luxury address and estate lot privacy. Silverleaf at DC Ranch for guard-gated McDowell Mountain canyon living at the top of the North Scottsdale market. Troon, Estancia, or Whisper Rock for the executive who prioritizes golf and resort-adjacent privacy.
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Profile Two
The Founder or Entrepreneur Choosing Their Base
Remote-capable, values flexibility and lifestyle, has likely spent time in Scottsdale before. The tax savings are meaningful but the lifestyle pull is equally real. May split time between markets initially. Wants a base that reflects the standard they’ve built without paying a California premium for the privilege of maintaining it.
Where they typically land: Old Town Scottsdale for walkability, restaurant density, and a property that works as a primary base or a high-performing pied-à-terre. DC Ranch or Grayhawk for buyers who want complete community infrastructure with trails, amenities, and a social community. Silverleaf for the founder who has reached the level where only the best address will do.
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Profile Three
The High-Net-Worth Retiree or Semi-Retiree
Has owned in California for decades. Children have left or are leaving. Prop 13 protection no longer offsets the overall tax burden. Health, lifestyle, and climate are the primary variables. Often purchasing in Scottsdale initially as a second home or seasonal residence October through April before committing to full-time. This is a well-established pattern in all of Scottsdale’s premium communities, and the market accommodates it fully.
Where they typically land: Paradise Valley for single-level estate privacy and no commercial zoning restrictions. Guard-gated golf communities Desert Mountain, Troon, Estancia for the buyer whose next chapter is organized around golf and resort living. DC Ranch and Silverleaf for buyers who want lock-and-leave convenience with community infrastructure.
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Sections 04 — 05
Schools and
Infrastructure.
For families, schools are often the deciding factor in both the move decision and the community selection. For all relocators, understanding the infrastructure airports, healthcare, connectivity determines whether the logistics of the move actually work for how you live.
| Section 04 — Schools
Scottsdale’s School
Landscape Is Strong. It Requires Navigation. Scottsdale Unified School District is one of the highest-performing large districts in Arizona, with multiple campuses consistently ranked among the top schools in the state. Parts of North Scottsdale are served by Paradise Valley Unified, which feeds into Pinnacle High School. School district assignment is determined by parcel address always verify the specific assignment for any property you are considering before purchasing. Community names are not a reliable guide.
BASIS Scottsdale — consistently ranked among the top 5 high schools in the United States by U.S. News & World Report. Rigorous college-prep curriculum with exceptional AP and university placement outcomes
Notre Dame Preparatory — Catholic college-prep high school in North Scottsdale with strong academic and athletic programs and a significant California transplant community in its student body
Great Hearts Academies — classical liberal arts charter schools with multiple campuses in Scottsdale and Paradise Valley, highly regarded for humanities-focused education
For families relocating from top independent school environments in California Menlo School, Harvard-Westlake, Marlborough the transition to Scottsdale’s private options is generally smooth, and the quality gap many assume exists often does not
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Section 05 — Infrastructure
Connectivity,
Airports, and Healthcare. The logistics of a California-to-Scottsdale move are more straightforward than most buyers expect, particularly for those maintaining business or family presence in both markets.
Phoenix Sky Harbor — 20–35 minutes from most Scottsdale neighborhoods. Direct flights to all California markets — Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, San Jose, Sacramento multiple times daily
Scottsdale Airport (SDL) — one of the busiest single-runway general aviation airports in the country. 10–15 minutes from most premium communities. For buyers who fly privately, its central Scottsdale location is a significant operational advantage
Mayo Clinic Scottsdale — a nationally recognized destination medical center. HonorHealth also maintains a major campus in Scottsdale. For buyers coming from California medical networks, the transition to comparable care quality is typically seamless
Driving — Scottsdale is a car city. Commute times that would be considered exceptional in the Bay Area or Los Angeles are routine here. North Scottsdale to downtown Phoenix: 35–45 minutes in normal traffic
Scottsdale Airpark — the second-largest employment campus in Arizona with nearly 3,000 businesses and 50,000 workers. GoDaddy, Vanguard, Quicken Loans, and CVS Caremark maintain major operations here, making North Scottsdale the natural executive residential market for the corridor
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Section 06
The Relocation Timeline,
Realistically.
What a well-managed California-to-Scottsdale relocation actually looks like from the first planning conversation to close of escrow and established residency.
Section 07
Frequently Asked
Questions.
The questions California buyers ask most answered directly.
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How hot does it actually get — and is it livable?
Summer temperatures in Scottsdale average 104–108°F from June through September. For most California transplants, the first Arizona summer is an adjustment. The practical reality is that summer is structured around air conditioning, early morning activity, resort pools, and short travel escapes many full-time residents travel for 4–6 weeks in July and August. North Scottsdale’s elevation reduces temperatures by 5–10°F relative to the Valley floor. Communities near 3,000 feet (Mirabel, northern Desert Mountain) are measurably more comfortable in summer. The dry heat recovers differently from humid heat — acclimation is faster than most expect, and evenings cool rapidly after sunset.
Can I keep my California home and buy in Scottsdale?
Yes, and many buyers do this initially. However, if California income tax reduction is a goal, establishing Arizona as your primary domicile requires more than owning property here it requires documented intent to make Arizona your permanent home, time spent in Arizona exceeding time in California, and a range of supporting documentation. Owning a California home while claiming Arizona domicile is legally possible but requires careful management and qualified tax advice. Work with a tax attorney before the move, not after.
What is the Scottsdale social scene like for California transplants?
The density of California transplants in Scottsdale’s luxury communities is substantial enough that the social fabric is genuinely familiar. The Silverleaf Club, the country clubs at DC Ranch, Desert Mountain, and Estancia, the dining scene in Old Town and North Scottsdale, and the resort amenities of the Four Seasons and Boulders all attract and serve a demographic that heavily overlaps with California’s luxury market. Most California buyers find the transition socially smoother than they anticipated and the absence of a two-hour commute tends to improve quality of life in ways that compound quickly.
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What neighborhoods are most popular with California buyers specifically?
Paradise Valley, Silverleaf, and North Scottsdale’s guard-gated golf communities (Troon, Estancia, Desert Mountain) see the highest concentration of California transplants. Northern California (Bay Area) buyers tend toward Paradise Valley and Silverleaf drawn by the combination of estate lots, privacy, and a price point that delivers what $5M–$10M gets in Atherton or Hillsborough. Southern California buyers are well-represented across all premium segments and often prioritize the resort lifestyle and golf access that Scottsdale delivers at a fraction of the comparable California cost.
What does it cost to buy in the neighborhoods California transplants choose?
Paradise Valley: $2M entry, $3M–$8M most active band, $15M+ for significant estates. Silverleaf at DC Ranch: $4M entry, $5M–$20M+ for custom estates. North Scottsdale guard-gated golf communities (Troon, Estancia): $1.5M–$6M. DC Ranch (non-Silverleaf): $1M–$5M. Old Town Scottsdale luxury condos and townhomes: $800K–$3M. Arcadia: $1.5M–$5M. The February 2026 market data shows Paradise Valley averaging $6.87M per transaction — the most active luxury market in the Phoenix metro.
Is the Scottsdale market competitive for buyers right now?
The spring 2026 market is active. February data showed Scottsdale SFR closings up 41% month-over-month, average sale prices up 21% year-over-year, and Paradise Valley posting $226.8M in total volume in a single month. The most desirable properties particularly in Silverleaf, Paradise Valley, and the guard-gated golf communities frequently trade before they reach the MLS. Being in the market with a well-connected buyer’s agent before you are ready to commit is the single most effective way to access the full inventory that actually exists.
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Work With Anne
You’ve Done the Research.
The Next Step Is Private.
Whether you’re at the beginning of the decision process or ready to begin a confidential property search, a private conversation is the most useful next step. Anne works exclusively with buyers and sellers in Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, and Arcadia.
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