Appeals Process for Real Property Assessments
The reassessment notices are mailed out prior to the beginning
of the inspection period, annually. If the property owner wishes
to discuss the assessment they can schedule a conference as soon
as possible after the notice is received.
At the conference, the PVA or a designated Deputy will explain how
the new assessment was derived. All information used in the reassessment
should be presented to the property owner. The property owner must be
prepared to show evidence to support their opinion of the value of
their property.
Examples are:
- Sales or assessment date from comparable properties.
- Income and expense statements for the past three years.
- Recent appraisals of the property.
- Original construction cost of additions and improvements.
- Insured value of the property.
- Asking price if it has been recently offered for sale.
It is desirable that the conference between the property owner and
PVA be in person but sometimes that is not feasible. In a case like
this a conference can be permitted by telephone.
Usually disagreements are resolved at these conferences by the
property owner understanding more about the assessment process
and accepting it or the PVA accepting the decrease due to documentation
provided by the property owner or discovering an error in the PVA
records. When a conference does not end in agreement, the property
owner can file and assessment appeal with the County Clerk's office.
Taxpayers Rights
Filing an Appeal
Appeals Hearing