You raised a family here. You don't need a stranger rushing you out the door — you need a plan, a steady hand, and someone who treats your home like it mattered. That's what this is.
A 5.0-star rating across Google, Yelp and Zillow — verified, never anonymous, and linked to the real profiles.
Michael Jackson was wonderful. He guided us through the entire sale with ease. He kept in touch, and was able to answer all of our questions. We were pleased the house sold fast. We would highly recommend Michael Jackson as your realtor.
Michael is just an amazing agent who was with us every step of the way in helping us find the perfect home in Marin. As we navigated through the stressful time of purchasing our new home in conjunction with the sale of our old home, he was always calm and reassuring. Even after we got our keys, he followed up to see how we were doing.
Michael Jackson did a great job for us. He was professional, attentive to detail and worked very hard. He was extremely patient through a complicated family process and always available for questions and help. He found us a great buyer. I can highly recommend him to anyone seeking a truly professional realtor.
Michael Jackson is a great Realtor. He is responsive and communicative, while giving his clients a clear roadmap for the real estate transaction. I recommend him for your next sale or purchase.
I cannot say enough good things about our experience with Michael. He took us on in the middle of a very difficult and sensitive situation with empathy, kindness and tons of knowledge. His incredibly prompt attention made the hard process easier and he stuck by our side until we achieved our desired outcome.
Michael is just an amazing agent who was with us every step of the way in helping us find the perfect home in Marin. As we navigated through the stressful time of purchasing our new home in conjunction with the sale of our old home, he was always calm and reassuring. Even after we got our keys, he followed up to see how we were doing.
If any of this sounds like your kitchen-table conversation, you're not behind — you're exactly where most Marin homeowners stand before they make a smart move.
Bedrooms you never enter. A second floor you avoid. A yard that's now a chore instead of a joy. The home that fit your family of five fits two of you like a coat three sizes too big.
Thirty years of holidays, report cards and china. Every box is a decision, and every decision feels like letting go of a memory. So you keep putting it off — and the dread grows.
What if you downsize too far and feel cramped? What if your property taxes explode? What if you regret it? The fear of a misstep keeps you frozen in a home that no longer serves you.
"The regret is almost never about right-sizing. It's about right-sizing without a plan — rushed, alone, and on someone else's timeline."
For more than 19 years, Michael — known across Marin as "Action Jackson" — has helped families through the biggest moves of their lives. A licensed California real estate broker and Realtor®, he holds the SRES® (Seniors Real Estate Specialist) designation, earned specifically to guide homeowners through exactly this chapter.
A former professional baseball player with a B.A. in Psychology from Sonoma State, Michael reads people, not just contracts. He knows a right-sizing decision is 90% emotion and 10% spreadsheet — and he honors both.
Prefer to just talk it through? Call or text Michael at (415) 483-6009.
This isn't a listing pitch. It's a planning relationship built for people who'd rather get it right than get it over with.
Sometimes the right answer is to not move. Michael walks your home and your numbers honestly — staying put, modifying, or selling — before anyone touches a "For Sale" sign. No agenda but yours.
If you're 55+, California Proposition 19 may let you carry your low property-tax base to your next home anywhere in the state. Michael maps it before you decide — so a smaller home never means a bigger tax bill.
Senior move managers, estate-sale pros, organizers, stagers and movers who specialize in this exact transition. You don't lift a box you don't want to — Michael's network does the heavy work.
Three months, six, or a year — your timeline, not the market's. We sort room by room, honor the memories, and never let a "compressed timeline" force a decision you'd regret.
A clear path from "we should probably think about this" to "we're so glad we did."
We sit down — at your kitchen table or over coffee — and talk through what your life actually needs now. No listing agreement, no commitment. Just a real conversation about your options.
Michael lays out your home's current value, your likely net after sale, the capital-gains exclusion, and how Prop 19 affects your future taxes. You see the whole picture before deciding anything.
If you choose to move, the vetted team helps you decide what comes, what's gifted, what's sold, and what's preserved as a keepsake. We photograph and honor the memories along the way.
Michael markets your home to net you the most, and helps you land the home that fits this chapter — single-level, low-maintenance, close to what matters. Then he's still your call after the keys change hands.
A right-sizing move is not a normal transaction. It deserves an agent trained for it.
| What You Need | Action Jackson · SRES® | The Average Agent |
|---|---|---|
| SRES® seniors training | Certified specialist | Rarely held |
| "Should you even move?" honesty | Stay-or-go audit, no agenda | Wants the listing |
| Prop 19 tax-base guidance | Mapped before you decide | "Ask your accountant" |
| Vetted senior-move network | Movers, organizers, estate sales | Hands you a flyer |
| Pace & emotional patience | Your timeline, room by room | Market's timeline |
| Marin-specific market depth | 19+ years, local board | Generalist |
| Single-level / accessible search | Built into the plan | Square footage only |
| After-the-sale support | Still your call, anytime | On to the next deal |
Pulled from the real conversations homeowners are having online — and answered straight.
There's no single age — but the strongest signals are unused rooms, stairs becoming a hurdle, and a yard that's now a burden. The advice experts repeat most is to start early, while you're healthy and not under pressure, so the move is a choice rather than a crisis.
It's the most common regret — picking a place that feels cozy on a walkthrough but cramped in daily life. The fix is planning for how you actually live: room for hobbies, guests and the belongings you're keeping. Michael sizes the next home to your life, not just a smaller number.
This is the fear that freezes many California homeowners. If you're 55 or older, Proposition 19 lets you transfer your home's low tax base to a replacement home anywhere in California — up to three times in your lifetime. A smaller home doesn't have to mean a bigger tax bill.
Often less than people fear. The IRS lets you exclude up to $250,000 of gain if single, $500,000 if married filing jointly, provided you lived there two of the last five years. Michael helps you see your likely net early — and recommends you confirm specifics with your tax advisor.
Slowly, and with help. A common trick: photograph the item, then let it go — or keep one piece of a collection rather than the whole set. Michael's vetted senior-move managers and estate-sale partners handle the sorting so it never becomes overwhelming.
That's normal — a home holds identity, not just possessions. Pushing rarely works; a calm, no-pressure plan does. Michael often starts with a simple stay-or-go conversation so your parent stays in control of every decision, on their own timeline.
It depends on your equity, the market and your nerves. Prop 19 even allows buying the replacement home before selling in some cases. Michael sequences it to minimize stress — including bridge options — so you're never homeless or rushed.
Nothing. The first conversation is free and carries no obligation — no listing agreement, no commitment to sell. You walk away with clarity on your options whether or not you ever move. That's the whole point.
No pressure. No obligation. Just an honest, free planning session with a broker who treats your home — and your timeline — with the respect they've earned.
Book a Free Planning SessionThe concerns, statistics and tax rules on this page are drawn from the following public sources.
| # | Source | What It Informs |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | ElderLife Financial — Common Downsizing Mistakes | Starting early; the emotional toll of a rushed timeline; the "photograph it, then let it go" approach. |
| 2 | SavingAdvice — 10 Costly Downsizing Mistakes | The regret of going too small; balancing simplicity with comfort and space for hobbies/guests. |
| 3 | YourNews — Housing Decisions Retirees Regret | Emotional shock of leaving a long-term home; identity tied to familiar spaces. |
| 4 | Moneywise — Regret After Downsizing to an Apartment | How hard it is to reverse a move; the emotional + financial weight of selling a longtime home. |
| 5 | CBC Docs — The Art of Downsizing | Attachment to belongings; the fear of "losing" a loved one by parting with their things. |
| 6 | Living in Marin — Proposition 19 Explained | Marin-specific Prop 19 tax-base transfer rules and the three-transfer lifetime limit. |
| 7 | California State Board of Equalization — Prop 19 | Official rules on transferring a base-year value for homeowners 55+. |
| 8 | CA Prop 19 — Property Tax Portability | Carrying your low tax base statewide to downsize or move closer to family/care. |
| 9 | Charles Schwab — Thinking About Downsizing | Capital-gains exclusion worked example; rent vs. own trade-offs in retirement. |
| 10 | Mize CPAs — Tax Considerations for Retirees | The $250k/$500k primary-residence capital-gains exclusion and timing of a sale. |
| 11 | Kiplinger — Downsizing Tax Considerations 2026 | How a home-sale gain can ripple into Social Security taxation; financial upside of downsizing. |
| 12 | GOBankingRates — Don't Downsize Too Soon | When NOT to move; needing space for belongings and the enjoyment of extra room. |
| 13 | Realtors via AOL — 5 Signs It's Time to Downsize | Empty-nest signals and the practical markers that a home has become too large. |
| 14 | The Downsizing Designer — The Emotional Side | "What if I miss it?" second-guessing; emotional roadblocks that delay the decision. |