Municipal-wide reassessments are the best way to ensure that assessments are fair and accurate.
During a reassessment, the assessor (or a hired contractor) will review the market values of all of the properties in the community. Based on changes in the real estate market, the assessor will determine which assessments need to be increased or decreased.
Depending on how long it has been since the last reassessment, the assessor may send information requests to property owners and/or do physical appraisals of properties.
Reassessments ensure you pay only your fair share of taxes
After several years without a reassessment, some properties will be overassessed and some will be underassessed. This is because some properties will have increased in value, while others may have decreased or stayed the same. Without a reassessment, all of the properties will continue to pay the same amount of taxes. For example:
| Property A | Property B | Total Taxes Collected by Town |
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|---|---|---|---|
| Market value 20 years ago | 100,000 | 100,000 | |
| Taxes 20 years ago | $2,000 | $2,000 | $4,000 |
| Market value today | 300,000 | 150,000 | |
| Taxes today | $2,000 | $2,000 | $4,000 |
Property A and B are still paying the same amount of taxes, even though Property A is worth twice as much as Property B! Property A should pay $2,667 and Property B should pay $1,333. A reassessment will correct this.
Without a reassessment, Property B is actually subsidizing the tax bill of Property A. This is because what one property owner doesn't rightly pay will be paid by other property owners.
Your taxes may increase, decrease or stay the same
Doing a reassessment doesn't mean your assessment or your taxes will automatically increase.
Market values of properties can increase, decrease or stay the same. The reassessment will ensure that your property is assessed based on current market values (rather than on market values from 20 years, like the example).
If your assessment does increase, it doesn't mean that your taxes will automatically increase. If the increase in your assessment is less than the average increase, your taxes will actually decrease. For example:
Reassessments don't increase taxes collected by local governments
The assessor is not responsible for taxes - only for assessments.
Months after assessments are finalized by the assessor, school districts, cities, towns and counties determine their tax levies - how much they need to collect in taxes.
The property tax levy is determined separately from the assessments. The tax levy is then distributed over all taxable assessments.
If assessments increase, tax rates should go down proportionally. This is because the tax levy is now being distributed over a broader tax base. If tax rates go up or stay the same, it simply means that the municipality or school district is collecting more in taxes.
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