A major housing bet, despite a personal move away
Google cofounder Sergey Brin has made his biggest single public donation to date, committing $20 million to a new effort aimed at easing California’s deepening housing crisis. The pledge comes only weeks after Brin shifted his primary residence to the Nevada side of Lake Tahoe, underscoring a growing tension between where some of the state’s wealthiest figures live and where they are directing their political and philanthropic capital.
The donation supports Building a Better California, a newly formed policy and political organization focused on increasing housing supply across the state. According to recent state disclosures, the group launched with $35 million in funding, including contributions from eight other prominent business leaders. Among them are former Google chief executive Eric Schmidt and longtime venture capitalist Michael Moritz, who each gave $2 million.
For Brin, the $20 million commitment represents his most visible and concentrated push into California housing policy. People familiar with his philanthropy describe it as his largest direct cash contribution to housing affordability efforts in the state.
Building a Better California enters a crowded policy fight
Building a Better California is expected to play an active role in upcoming ballot initiatives and legislative battles that seek to accelerate housing construction and reduce regulatory barriers. California’s slow permitting processes, local zoning restrictions, and neighborhood opposition have long been cited as obstacles to building enough homes to match population and job growth.
Brin’s donation positions him as a significant force in one of the state’s most politically charged debates. Housing policy has increasingly drawn the attention of major donors who view supply constraints as a core driver of inequality, homelessness, and economic stagnation.
The timing is notable. Roughly a week before Brin’s donation became public, tech investor Peter Thiel contributed $3 million to a California business coalition opposing a proposed ballot measure that would impose a new wealth tax on billionaires. Together, the donations highlight how California’s policy environment is attracting large sums of money from individuals who are simultaneously reassessing their long-term ties to the state.
Moving residence, not retreating influence
Brin’s expanded political giving follows reports that he purchased a $42 million lakefront estate on the Nevada side of Lake Tahoe, widely known as Crystal Pointe. Public property records and corporate filings suggest the acquisition is part of a broader shift of assets and residency away from California.
The five-acre property includes multiple structures, private lake access, and glass funiculars descending to the shoreline. While Brin has not publicly commented on the move, similar decisions by other technology founders have fueled debate over whether high taxes and regulatory complexity are pushing wealth out of the state.
Brin’s fellow Google cofounder Larry Page has also reduced his California footprint. Page has relocated to Miami and purchased multiple waterfront homes, while moving business entities to Delaware and Florida. These moves reflect a broader trend among ultra-high-net-worth individuals seeking more favorable tax and regulatory environments.
Housing pressure reaches a breaking point
California’s housing shortage remains one of its most pressing economic challenges. Rents and home prices continue to outpace income growth, while homelessness remains highly visible in major cities. Both Los Angeles and San Francisco were recently listed by UBS Global Wealth Management among cities with some of the most inflated housing markets globally.
Critics of the state’s housing system argue that decades of underbuilding have left California unable to absorb new residents or retain middle-income workers. Supporters of reform say that increasing density near transit hubs and streamlining approvals could significantly reduce costs over time.
Even some architects of the proposed wealth tax acknowledge housing as a fundamental problem. Brian Galle, a UC Berkeley law professor and leading wealth tax expert, has publicly criticized California’s housing policies, describing them as hostile to newcomers and poorly aligned with existing infrastructure investments.
A paradox for California’s future
Brin’s latest move captures a growing paradox for California. As some of its most successful founders relocate their homes and financial structures elsewhere, their money continues to flow back into shaping the state’s future. In Brin’s case, the focus is housing, a policy area widely seen as central to California’s economic resilience.
With ballot measures and legislative fights looming, Building a Better California will test whether large-scale donor involvement can overcome entrenched local resistance and bureaucratic inertia. For now, Brin’s record donation signals that even as physical ties loosen, the stakes in California’s housing debate remain high for those who helped build its modern economy.





