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Budjeg11
LIF Adult
Member since 4/11 2644 total posts
Name:
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Grieving your own taxes
DH and I bought our house about 4 years ago and have since grieved our taxes every year through a company. I am wondering how easy it is to grieve the taxes ourselves?
Does anyone have any experience with this? Can anyone walk me through the process?
Thanks!
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Posted 10/29/13 1:38 PM |
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sunnyflies
LIF Adult
Member since 9/09 1757 total posts
Name:
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Grieving your own taxes
I have done it successfully twice. You must have a valid point that you can prove as to why you believe your taxes are too high. Most towns have a Tax Grievance Day when people can go in person to complain about their taxes. Some villages do also. You will need to be able to show why you feel your taxes ought to be reduced or are unfair, that means bringing some paperwork to back up your reasoning.
I went to my town hall and got information from the tax assessor's office to back up my argument. I had pages from the tax rolls printed out for 25¢ a page - both the tax map showing my property's location and any showing the properties I was using as comparables. I also would get copies of those properties listings on the tax rolls which gives a description of their square footage, rooms and amenities (2,100 sq ft, 4BR, 2 & 1/2B, FPL, garage, etc.). It's not hard and I found that the staff in the office was helpful.
Armed with that information, I could go to Grievance Day ready to show what other houses around me were paying, the size of their lots and the buildings on them, and was able to easily compare them to mine - I yellow highlighted the relevant properties to make it immediately clear.
One time I was being charged a premium for being waterfront when I was not. My tax bill was the same as someone who had hundreds of bulkheaded waterfront and a far bigger house. Another time I was assessed for a larger more up to date building than I had. I had to prove that the assessment was incorrect. In both cases my taxes were rolled back. In one I had to also appear in front of a judge at a later date, but it was easy and he was very nice. He gave me the maximum reduction allowed by law. I went alone, but I noticed others brought their lawyers that day.
Message edited 10/29/2013 2:12:02 PM.
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Posted 10/29/13 1:59 PM |
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Mill188
LIF Adult
Member since 3/09 3073 total posts
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Re: Grieving your own taxes
It's easy to do. However, an argument that you're paying more than your neighbors is not a valid argument. You have to prove: (1) there is a discrepancy on the Assessment roll (i.e., they are taxing something that isn't there, etc.); or (2) the assessed value of your home is incorrect because it does not reflect the proper value of your home.
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Posted 10/29/13 2:11 PM |
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VikingChick
LIF Adult

Member since 5/11 1024 total posts
Name: Anna
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Re: Grieving your own taxes
Posted by Mill188
It's easy to do. However, an argument that you're paying more than your neighbors is not a valid argument. You have to prove: (1) there is a discrepancy on the Assessment roll (i.e., they are taxing something that isn't there, etc.); or (2) the assessed value of your home is incorrect because it does not reflect the proper value of your home.
The best evidence is similar houses (style, size, size of lot, external factors, etc.) that have sold near your house for less money than you are currently assessed at.
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Posted 10/29/13 2:48 PM |
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Mill188
LIF Adult
Member since 3/09 3073 total posts
Name:
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Re: Grieving your own taxes
Actually the best evidence is your recent sales price (if you are a new owner). The next best evidence is a recent appraisal followed by a comps run.
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Posted 10/29/13 9:23 PM |
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snowprincess
My happy babies

Member since 3/06 3428 total posts
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Re: Grieving your own taxes
Posted by Mill188
Actually the best evidence is your recent sales price (if you are a new owner). The next best evidence is a recent appraisal followed by a comps run.
both very good - sale price with a standard mortgage (private mortgage not sufficient) appraisal works well
your own appraisal of similar comps and comparison of lot size, house size, extra features, style, number bed.bath, updated or not
I have done it twice and won twice - my town gives you examples on how to fill out the paperwork. definitely include supporting documents
I fought my assessed value and lowered the assessed value
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Posted 10/29/13 10:16 PM |
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