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Property Tax Myth

By , November 21, 2010

Property Tax Myth

Time spent protesting your property taxes can be very profitable to you. In fact, the average property tax savings for homeowners is 0. However, the uncertainty of how the process works and what results are achievable intimidates many into not attempting to protest their property taxes.

The following steps will provide you insight into the appeal process and put you on your way to a successful appeal:

Either send a written notice of appeal to the ARB for the county in which your home is located or utilize the comptroller’s form. The deadline to file an appeal is May 31st.

Request a House Bill 201 packet. The packet is available at a nominal cost and will include information regarding both market value and unequal appraisal and the appraisal district’s information regarding size, condition and other qualitative and quantitative data for your property. Requesting this packet limits what information the appraisal district can present at the hearing.

Review the appraisal district’s description of your home and confirm that all the information is accurate. If the appraisal district overstates either the quality or quantity of improvements to your property, this is an excellent means to reduce your property taxes for the current years and subsequent years.

By protesting on unequal appraisal, you are claiming the appraisal district assessed your home for more than your neighbor’s home. To present this protest, research around 10 comparable properties that are similar in regard to the quality and quantity of improvements within your neighborhood.

Prepare your own unequal appraisal analysis based on researching assessment comparables on the appraisal district’s website or by written request. Select assessment comparables and summarize the data in a table.

If you feel your property’s assessed value is too high, it’s your right to file a formal protest. You can protest your property value yourself following the guidelines above, or hire a professional consultant to handle your protest for you. Either way, there’s no reason to pay more property taxes than is required by law.

Don’t pay more than your fair share of property taxes. Let O’Connor & Associates reduce your California property tax. Oconnor & Associates can represent you at the Florida property tax .

Patrick C. O’Connor has been president of O’Connor & Associates since 1983 and is a recipient of the prestigious MAI designation from the Appraisal Institute. He is also an registered senior property tax consultant in the state of Texas and has written numerous articles in state and national publications on reducing property taxes. He continues to set the standard in direction and quality of our appraisal products, adding services ranging from business valuations and business appraisals to cost segregation analysis for income tax reduction.

http://www.poconnor.com


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Harris County Appraisal District – Tips for a Successful Property Tax Protest

By , November 12, 2010

Harris County Appraisal District – Tips for a Successful Property Tax Protest

Harris County Appraisal District – Tips for a Successful Property Tax Protest

Harris County Appraisal District assesses property and that value sets your property tax amount. Reducing your property taxes is relatively simple but requires a modest commitment of time. Your other option is to hire a property tax consultant. Basic steps to reducing the property tax assessment set by Harris County Appraisal District include appealing both market value and unequal appraisal annually, obtaining the Harris County Appraisal District evidence, preparing for the hearing(s) and attending the informal and/or appraisal review board hearing. Few property owners are aware of the option to obtain the HCAD evidence. Sometimes referred to as the House Bill 201 package or 41.461 package, this information in invaluable in preparing for your property tax hearing. This article focuses on the hearing process.

There are two options for the “administrative” hearing process at Harris County Appraisal District: 1) the informal hearing and 2) the appraisal review board (ARB) hearing. Neither the property owner nor Harris County Appraisal District is required to attend the informal hearing. About 80% of property tax protests are resolved by agreement between the property owner/property tax consultant and the Harris County Appraisal District appraiser. The second option, which typically occurs if you are not able to reach agreement with the Harris County Appraisal District appraiser, is the ARB hearing. The property owners often receive some property tax relief at the ARB hearing.

Harris County Appraisal District appraisers seldom reduce the assessed value for a home by 0,000 or more. If you are seeking a reduction of more than 0,000 for a home, you should probably skip the informal hearing with the Harris County Appraisal District appraiser. There are several reasons for skipping the informal hearing at HCAD if you are seeking an increase of 0,000 or more. It will likely be a waste of your time. Further, you spend your time helping the HCAD appraiser to prepare their file for the ARB hearing.

Make sure you arrive early for the hearing and try to project a cheerful, cordial and relaxed attitude, even if you are nervous. After you check in with the Harris County Appraisal District clerk, you will likely wait for 30 – 60 minutes. Bring a book, newspaper or work to pass the time. Greet the Harris County Appraisal District appraiser cheerfully and enthusiastically. His goal is similar to yours; reach a compromise quickly. At Harris County Appraisal District, the appraisers are encouraged to make changes if there is evidence to support the change. The exception is unequal appraisal. Most Harris County Appraisal District appraisers are reluctant to make changes on unequal appraisal evidence. HCAD’s approach on unequal appraisal is in flux. However, if your appeal is on unequal appraisal, you will likely need to attend the ARB hearing.

After you exchange and discuss evidence with the Harris County Appraisal District appraiser, he will likely make you an offer to settle the property tax protest. You can accept the offer or continue the appeal with the ARB hearing. In most cases the value offered informally will also be suggested by the Harris County Appraisal District appraiser at the ARB hearing.

Property owners are often reluctant to attend the appraisal review board (ARB) hearing because they think they are wasting their time with such a small property. This is not the case. Harris County ARB members are courteous, respectful and want the property owner to feel good about the ARB hearing.

Players at the ARB hearings include the 3 ARB members, property owner (or property tax consultant) and the Harris County Appraisal District appraiser. After introductions and a brief explanation of the process:

Property owner presents evidence

Questions from ARB members

Harris County Appraisal District appraiser presents their evidence

Questions from the ARB

Property owner rebuttal

Questions from the ARB

ARB panel deliberates and announces a decision

 

In most cases, property owners believe the decision was reasonable. The decision is not subject to negotiation. Thank the ARB members for their time and service. If you are not satisfied with the decision, you can pursue binding arbitration or a judicial appeal.
The appraisal division of O’Connor & Associates is a national provider of investment real estate appraisal services including. Business valuation ,market studies , feasibility studies, real estate consulting, income tax, HCAD, Property tax, Cost segregation, Commercial real estate appraisal, Due diligence

Patrick O’Connor

 

 

 

Patrick C. O’Connor has been president of O’Connor & Associates since 1983 and is a recipient of the prestigious MAI designation from the Appraisal Institute. He is also a registered senior property tax consultant in the state of Texas and has written numerous articles in state and national publications on reducing property taxes. He continues to set the standard in direction and quality of our appraisal products, adding services ranging from business valuations and business appraisals to cost segregation analysis for income tax reduction.


Article from articlesbase.com

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How to Minimize the Property Tax Assessments Set by the Harris County Appraisal District

By , October 7, 2010

How to Minimize the Property Tax Assessments Set by the Harris County Appraisal District

Harris County Appraisal District estimates the market value for 1.6 million parcels of real estate with a staff of about 150 appraisers. That’s an average of over 10,000 parcels per appraiser per year! While they value a large number of properties annually, you can focus intense attention on reducing the value of your property. You can minimize your property taxes with simple steps:

File a protest by May 31st for market value and unequal appraisal
Obtain the Harris County Appraisal District evidence?two weeks before the hearing. This information is sometimes referred to as the House Bill 201 package or the 41.461 package. It typically contains evidence regarding the subject property, market value and unequal appraisal.
Review evidence for both unequal appraisal and market value. Unequal appraisal is when your property is taxed/assessed at a higher rate than comparable properties. For a market value appeal, provided evidence that the appraisal district’s value exceeds market value. This could include information such as an error in the size of your property and deferred maintenance at your property.
Attend the informal and/or appraisal review board (ARB) hearing at the Harris County Appraisal District. In many cases, you can attend a hearing prior to the scheduled date. HCAD prefers to have hearings prior to rather than after the scheduled hearing date.
Repeat these steps annually.Property owners often ask, “I appealed my property taxes at the Harris County Appraisal District last year and obtained a reduction. Harris County Appraisal District did not increase my assessed value. Should I protest my property taxes again this year?” The answer is, “Yes, you should protest.” There are 2 reasons you should protest the assessed value established by the Harris County Appraisal District each year:

The prior years value set an “anchor value” for the current year’s property tax protest. If your value was 0,000 last year and the current year’s proposed value is 0,000, there is a tendency to set the value at or slightly above last year’s value. In the case, a typical result might be 0,000 to 0,000. However, if they had appealed at the Harris County Appraisal District the prior year and reduced the value to 5,000, a typical settlement might be 5,000 – 5,000. Property tax appeals at Harris County Appraisal District are an iterative process.
Most appeals at Harris County Appraisal District are successful. About 75-80% of the property tax appeals conducted by O’Connor & Associates at Harris County Appraisal District result in lower property taxes.Experience shows that when property owners appeal, prepare for the Harris County Appraisal District hearings and attend the hearing(s), they will usually be successful. Property tax consultants are willing to handle the property tax protest process at Harris County Appraisal District for a portion of the property tax savings. While there is a cost when hiring a property tax consultant, you realize property tax savings. The property tax savings versus the cost of a property tax consultant are more significant when considering the iterative nature of the property tax appeal process.

This capacity to research, analyze and interpret market trends and the impact of specific transactions is a major reason for why developers and acquisition experts rely on O’Connor & Associates for tax deductions, cost segregation, project design guidance, property performance evaluation and lease audits. O’Connor & Associates is an acknowledged source of trends in real estate investing and market activity.

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