Print this Page Going Green Shouldn't Increase Property Taxes
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A key question remains: do the added start-up costs of going 'green' translate into higher property taxes for hotels? The answer is they can and here's how you can prevent it.
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From a property tax perspective, three components comprise a hotel property: the real estate, the tangible personal property (furniture, fixtures and equipment), and the operating business. The real estate and tangible personal property are the two components, and the only two components, that by law are subject to property taxation in most states. Many tax assessors use the income approach to value hotels, and most recognize that certain income adjustments must be made in order to remove the value of the hotel's business for property tax purposes. Once specific business start-up costs for a 'green' hotel are established, appropriate adjustments should be made to the income model to remove: 1.) the costs associated with the 'green' business initiatives and 2.) the expected rate of return on the 'green' investments. When owners fail to remove these items from their hotel's valuation, the eco-initiatives that drive additional business value for the 'green' hotel can be inadvertently taxed as real estate value. |
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Michael Shalley is Director of Appeals is a partner with the Austin, Texas law firm of Popp, Gray & Hutcheson. The firm devotes its practice to the representation of taxpayers in property tax disputes and is the Texas member of the American Property Tax Counsel (APTC), the national affiliation of property tax attorneys. Mr. Shalley can be reached at : mike.shalley@property-tax.com. |
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