📍 ZIP Code Guide

Home Buying Documents in 94002 — Belmont

Belmont (94002) rises from the bay into wooded hills, and the hillside is the story: landslide and slope-stability risk, wildfire in the wooded WUI, older homes with permit questions, and large supplemental tax bills on Peninsula prices.

Capiyo NestHome analysis Belmont, San Mateo County Updated July 2026
Belmont hills
Hillside homes face landslide & slope-stability risk
San Mateo County
WUI
Wooded hillsides carry wildfire (FHSZ) exposure
CAL FIRE
$7,000–$16,000
Typical first-year supplemental tax on Belmont prices
San Mateo ATC
2.1
Avg critical findings per transaction
Capiyo findings DB

What Belmont buyers miss most often

In Belmont, hillside geology and wildfire are the surprises; Peninsula prices drive a large supplemental tax.

DocumentSeverityWhat buyers missFinancial impact
Hillside / Landslide & Geology Critical Belmont's steep, wooded slopes face stability and drainage risk $25,000–$200,000 stabilization risk
Wildfire / WUI & Insurance High Wooded hillside homes face FHSZ designation and premium increases $3,000–$9,000/yr premium or non-renewal
Supplemental Property Tax High Prop 13 reset on Peninsula prices produces post-close bills $7,000–$16,000 first year
Permit History (older/hillside homes) High Decks, additions, and retaining walls often unpermitted on slopes $10,000–$60,000 permit/repair risk
Transfer Disclosure Statement Medium Vague answers on drainage, settling, and prior slides warrant follow-up $5,000–$50,000 undisclosed repairs

Why the hillside defines Belmont risk

Belmont climbs from the bay flats into steep, wooded hills, and the hillside homes — where much of the value is — carry the geology and fire risk. Slope stability, drainage, and retaining structures are the recurring issues, and decks and additions on slopes are frequently unpermitted. A geologic/soils review and careful permit verification are worth the cost.

Retaining walls and drainage are where hillside costs hide. On Belmont slopes, failing retaining walls, poor drainage, and downhill water flow can undermine foundations and decks. Look specifically at the retaining structures, the grading, and any signs of movement, and confirm permits — an unpermitted hillside deck or wall can become your liability and your repair bill.

The wooded WUI hillsides can carry wildfire (FHSZ) exposure that affects insurance — get a quote before removing contingencies. And on Peninsula prices, budget for a supplemental tax bill of many thousands after close, outside escrow. Read the TDS closely for any mention of settling, drainage problems, or prior slope movement.

What Belmont buyers worry about most

Is the hillside stable?
Belmont's steep, wooded slopes face landslide and drainage risk. Get a geologic report, inspect retaining walls and grading, and look for signs of movement.
Can I insure a wooded hillside home?
WUI hillside homes can be in FHSZ and face non-renewal or higher premiums. Get an insurance quote and check the NHD fire designation first.
Are decks and additions permitted?
Often not, on slopes. Verify permits for decks, additions, and retaining walls so you don't inherit code and repair liability.
How big is my supplemental tax?
On Peninsula prices, $7,000–$16,000 in year one is common. Prop 13 resets to your purchase price; the bill arrives after close, outside escrow.
What should the TDS tell me here?
Watch for settling, drainage problems, or prior slope movement. On hillside lots these are the early warnings that warrant follow-up.
Should I get earthquake insurance?
On hillside lots, many buyers do. It's a separate policy with a high deductible — price it into your monthly cost.

Get your 94002 document checklist

Upload your Belmont purchase documents and Capiyo flags what to review before you commit — hillside geology, wildfire insurance, permits, and supplemental tax.

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