AI Assistant That Get Things Done
logo
pine
Try for free
nav-show-menu
icon-back

How to Appeal Your Property Tax Assessment and Lower Your Tax Bill

Challenge an unfair property tax assessment and reduce your annual bill. Step-by-step appeal process with evidence strategies and success rates.

Last edited on May 17, 2026
5 min read

How to Appeal Your Property Tax Assessment and Lower Your Tax Bill

Millions of homeowners are overassessed — and most never challenge it. National studies estimate that 30-60% of properties are assessed above market value, yet fewer than 5% of homeowners file appeals. Those who do appeal succeed roughly half the time, with average savings of $1,000-$3,000 annually.

Property tax appeals are free to file, don't require a lawyer, and take a few hours of preparation. Here's exactly how to determine if you're overassessed and win your appeal.

Are You Overassessed? How to Tell

Check 1: Compare Assessment to Market Value

  • Find your assessed value on your tax notice or assessor's website
  • Look up recent sales (last 6-12 months) of similar homes in your neighborhood
  • If your assessment exceeds what comparable homes actually sold for, you have grounds to appeal

Check 2: Look for Assessment Errors

Common errors that inflate assessments:

  • Incorrect square footage (bigger than actual)
  • Wrong number of bedrooms/bathrooms
  • Listed features you don't have (finished basement, pool, garage)
  • Incorrect lot size
  • Wrong construction type or quality grade
  • Failed to account for damage or needed repairs

Check 3: Compare to Neighbors

Most assessor websites let you look up any property. Check similar homes on your street:

  • Are comparable homes assessed significantly lower?
  • Were similar homes recently reassessed downward?
  • Is there an obvious pattern of over-assessment on your block?

The Appeal Process (General Framework)

Most jurisdictions follow this structure:

Level 1: Informal Review

  • Contact assessor's office to discuss your concerns
  • Present evidence of overvaluation
  • Many reductions happen at this stage without a formal hearing
  • Free, fast, and low-effort

Level 2: Formal Appeal to Board of Review/Equalization

  • File a written appeal within the deadline
  • Present evidence at a hearing (usually 10-15 minutes)
  • Board reviews and issues a decision
  • Free in most jurisdictions

Level 3: State Tax Court/Further Appeal

  • If the board denies your appeal, most states allow further appeal
  • May involve tax court or state assessment board
  • Attorney or consultant may be helpful at this stage

Evidence That Wins Appeals

Comparable Sales (Most Important)

Find 3-5 comparable properties that sold recently for less than your assessed value:

  • Same neighborhood (within 1 mile ideally)
  • Similar size (within 10-20% of square footage)
  • Similar age and condition
  • Sold within last 6-12 months
  • Sold for less than your current assessment

Where to find comps: Zillow, Redfin, Realtor.com (sold listings), county recorder's office, or ask a real estate agent for a CMA (comparative market analysis — many will provide one free hoping for future business).

Property Condition Issues

Document anything that reduces your home's value:

  • Foundation problems
  • Roof damage or age
  • Outdated systems (plumbing, electrical, HVAC)
  • Environmental issues (flood zone, noise, contamination)
  • Needed repairs with contractor estimates
  • Photos showing deterioration

Assessment Errors

If your property record card contains errors:

  • Print the record from the assessor's website
  • Mark each error clearly
  • Provide correct information with supporting evidence
  • Errors alone can reduce assessment by 10-20%

Step-by-Step Filing Guide

Step 1: Get Your Assessment Notice

  • Note the deadline for filing an appeal (typically on the notice)
  • Review the assessed value and property details
  • Compare to your estimate of fair market value

Step 2: Visit the Assessor's Office (Informal Review)

  • Bring your evidence (comps, photos, error documentation)
  • Be polite and factual
  • Ask: "Based on these comparable sales, can we discuss adjusting my assessment?"
  • If they agree to reduce, get it in writing

Step 3: File Formal Appeal If Informal Fails

  • Complete the appeal form (available from assessor's office or website)
  • Include: property address, current assessment, your opinion of value, and why
  • Attach all supporting evidence
  • File before the deadline (late filings are typically rejected)

Step 4: Prepare for the Hearing

  • Organize evidence clearly (labeled comps, property photos, error documentation)
  • Prepare a brief verbal presentation (5 minutes)
  • Focus on facts, not opinions or emotions
  • Bring extra copies of everything for board members

Step 5: Attend the Hearing

  • Present your case concisely
  • Lead with your strongest comparable sale
  • Show the gap between comps and your assessment
  • Answer questions directly
  • Board typically decides within 30 days

Quick Checklist

  • [ ] Checked assessment notice for deadline
  • [ ] Compared assessment to recent comparable sales
  • [ ] Reviewed property record card for errors
  • [ ] Gathered 3-5 comparable sales below my assessment
  • [ ] Documented property condition issues
  • [ ] Attempted informal review with assessor
  • [ ] Filed formal appeal before deadline
  • [ ] Organized evidence package for hearing

Bottom Line

Property tax appeals are one of the most overlooked money-saving opportunities for homeowners. The process is free, takes a few hours, and succeeds in 30-50% of cases. Even modest reductions compound over years of ownership. If comparable homes are selling for less than your assessed value, you likely have a strong case worth pursuing.

Sources

  • IAAO Assessment Standards: https://www.iaao.org/
  • National Taxpayers Union Foundation: https://www.ntu.org/foundation/

Keep Reading