This piece takes a look at the television drama Tracker’s big move—production is relocating from Canada to Los Angeles for its fourth season, thanks to California’s expanded film and TV tax-incentive program.
Marin County readers already know the Bay Area’s rugged scenery has always drawn filmmakers. But this season’s incentives really show just how much the industry’s finances drive where stories are shot—and maybe, just maybe, how Marin towns from San Rafael to Sausalito could benefit down the line.
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California film incentives, Tracker’s relocation, and the Bay Area impact
Tracker, one of TV’s most-watched action dramas, is packing up and heading to Los Angeles for season 4. Disney’s 20th Television produces the show, and Justin Hartley leads the cast.
This move comes with a hefty tax credit—the biggest handed out so far under California’s expanded $750-million incentive program. The credit totals $48 million, based on projected California spending that tops $129 million.
Production is planned for 176 filming days. The crew will number around 250, with 275 cast members joining in.
The program offers a 35% base credit, plus an extra 5% rural bonus for qualified spending outside the Greater Los Angeles 30-mile zone. That’s a nice fit for Tracker’s outdoorsy storytelling style.
For Marin, it’s a reminder of how these incentive structures can shape where big shows film—even when the Bay Area’s landscapes can easily rival Hollywood’s backlots.
Showrunner Elwood Reid gave a nod to Vancouver-based crews for their work on the first three seasons. But he said California’s incentives made the move south to LA possible.
Tracker debuted in 2024. By late April, its third season had climbed to the fourth most-watched spot on linear television, according to Nielsen.
The Bay Area and Marin County are watching a bigger trend unfold. California now competes with international destinations that used to lure productions away from the West Coast.
Some big names in this movement include Season 3 of Amazon’s Fallout and Dan Fogelman’s NFL drama The Land. Other high-profile projects are coming back to California, signaling that San Francisco and Marin communities could see more interest in flexible filming spaces and soundstage investments.
California’s expanded program has already attracted over 100 productions that earned credits. This is partly a response to so many shows relocating to Ireland, the U.K., and Canada.
Industry advocates warn that incentives alone can’t rebuild the domestic production base. They say broader federal support is needed.
Senator Adam Schiff has been pushing for a bipartisan federal film incentive proposal to boost America’s competitiveness. For Marin County towns like Mill Valley and Corte Madera, this could mean more shoots on the calendar, and local crews getting valuable experience that might ripple through San Rafael’s media scene.
What the numbers mean for the Bay Area and Marin’s film economy
California’s film-credit framework is pretty straightforward. It rewards investment.
The Tracker deal shows a 40% incentive (that’s 35% base credit plus a 5% rural bonus) on qualified spending. The rural bonus is supposed to encourage shoots outside dense metro areas.
With roughly 250 crew and 275 actors, and 176 shoot days, you can see how just one series can shape labor demand across all sorts of sectors. That includes post-production and even local hospitality in towns like San Rafael, Novato, and Larkspur.
In Marin, the upside is twofold. First, the incentive structure can draw in features and episodic work that highlight outdoor, nature-forward stories—think Point Reyes National Seashore or the tidal flats near Sausalito. Those spots become magnets for location scouts who’d rather have the Bay Area’s coastline than a studio lot.
Second, it creates opportunities for the local workforce. VFX artists in downtown San Francisco, camera departments in Tiburon and Fairfax—crews all over are looking to take advantage of California’s film-friendly environment.
- More interest in Marin locations that echo Tracker’s wilderness vibe, like Tomales Bay and the Marin Headlands.
- Extra chances for local film schools and training programs in the San Rafael and Santa Rosa areas.
- The possibility of a bigger Bay Area film cluster if incentives keep drawing productions back to California studios.
- Ongoing calls for a stronger federal incentive program to keep up with international competition.
Marin’s unique backdrop: a natural set for future productions
As the industry keeps an eye on these incentive-driven decisions, Marin County’s towns—Mill Valley, Novato, Sausalito, Benicia (over in the East Bay), and Point Reyes Station—stand ready as potential doubles for rugged, open landscapes. Filmmakers get pulled in by the coastline, the redwoods, and those wide, wild skies.
This place could easily become the next chapter in California’s ongoing competition for prestige productions. If you’re in San Anselmo or Marinwood, you might notice more local crews around, see some cross-county collaboration, and maybe even feel a bit of that old Bay Area production energy coming back.
All this happens without having to give up the reliability of a strong LA backstop—especially when a series wants to reach global audiences. Marin’s landscapes just keep calling, honestly, and they’re always waiting for the next story that needs a little wilderness drama mixed with California’s vibrant economy.
Maybe that means more time in a local hotel conference room in San Rafael while a scouting banner goes up over Mill Valley. Who knows? The next big thing could be just around the corner.
Here is the source article for this story: CBS’s ‘Tracker’ is moving to LA to chase CA’s film tax incentive
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