what exactly are you grieving? i'm just curious because i work in the business. tell me the story
it's for my mom - her property/school taxes are now 14k, an increase of 2-3k from just a year ago without doing anything to the house. We would like to challenge it. From what I read, the town/county banks on people not going too far to challenge this. Also, when my wife and I went to look at new houses the realtor also suggested we grieve every year.
it's for my mom - her property/school taxes are now 14k, an increase of 2-3k from just a year ago without doing anything to the house. We would like to challenge it. From what I read, the town/county banks on people not going too far to challenge this. Also, when my wife and I went to look at new houses the realtor also suggested we grieve every year.
Approach it from that viewpoint. Here, I'd try to get comparable sales in the area from local Real Estate offices. I would also look into hiring an independent appraiser to come up with a true value. You have to present them evidence, not just say that you feel it's too high.If that is the case, it is the assessment you want to fight.
it's for my mom - her property/school taxes are now 14k, an increase of 2-3k from just a year ago without doing anything to the house. We would like to challenge it. From what I read, the town/county banks on people not going too far to challenge this. Also, when my wife and I went to look at new houses the realtor also suggested we grieve every year.
That's absolutely fucking insane. Eleven hundred bucks a month in taxes? I assume your mom lives in million dollar plus home?
no it is just a regular split-level worth $550k right now but it's one of the top towns on the island with top schools. At least she's done with her mortgage... but $1100/mo. itself is also half my monthly mortgage. When we move in the next few months (top schools/good town), we'll also be paying $10k annually... necessary evil... otherwise we'd just move to the middle of nowhere with no family or friends but live a lot more comfortably.
Property taxes are tax deductible I believe.
Everybody should look into this and pay attention to your property tax. With counties/states hurting they seem to be squeezing money from property taxes, mainly by raising the property evaluation. Of course prices are going down, NOT up so the appraisal should also go down and less tax. "hey, they'll never notice or do anything about it!"
maybe in your area. here, we just want to get the values right. assessments dropping usually means the municipality will just raise the mill rates.
i am under the impression that the counties / assessment bodies in the US are one and the same. this is just plain wrong... then all it would take would be for the people in charge to say hey, assessor, crank up the values or you're fired.
at least in Ontario, it is done independently, without the influence of the municipalities.
after some more digging I was able to find an online form by the county to start the appeal process. On the form they ask questions like did we build up or out in the last 3 years, and show comps (via parcel ID) to other properties that sold recently... and of course they ask for the assessment value we think it should be. Hopefully they'll take this and it won't require further appeal. One confusing thing though is the title is: File a New Appeal for Tax Year 2011/12. I read somewhere else that they go 2 years back (current assessment is based on your actual value then). So why would an appeal be submitted for a year in advance now? End goal is to pay minimal tax for this year.
thanks to the Harris government. Some services shouldn't have been downloaded and this is a perfect example. Any corporation operating on a barebones budget with a severe shortage of staff is going to be a "mess". Add in new legislation which phases in assessments over 4 years and you add to the mess. What they should have done is do the phase-ins at the property tax level, not the assessment level. Instead of 4 different values on an assessment notice, all they would have had to do was phase it in at the municipal level, ie. one assessment and 4 different payment amounts per year over 4 years. Add in that we are currently operating without a contract, and talk of a big reorganization, and then you get employees who are concerned about their job security. Not exactly the best set of circumstances when it comes to employee motivation.except MPAC is an absolute mess.
thanks to the Harris government. Some services shouldn't have been downloaded and this is a perfect example. Any corporation operating on a barebones budget with a severe shortage of staff is going to be a "mess". Add in new legislation which phases in assessments over 4 years and you add to the mess. What they should have done is do the phase-ins at the property tax level, not the assessment level. Instead of 4 different values on an assessment notice, all they would have had to do was phase it in at the municipal level, ie. one assessment and 4 different payment amounts per year over 4 years. Add in that we are currently operating without a contract, and talk of a big reorganization, and then you get employees who are concerned about their job security. Not exactly the best set of circumstances when it comes to employee motivation.
and FWIW the complaints are less than 2% provincewide. over 4.5 million properties. mass appraisal is not an exact science. in fact we rely on the public to bring complaints forward because it helps us to achieve more accurate values. every property is unique - we don't have the time or staff to do an independent study on each one of them but are more than happy to do so, should someone come forward with a complaint.except MPAC is an absolute mess.

 
				
		