Menu

Property Tax Resources

2 minutes reading time (421 words)

Valuation Dispute Strategies - 4 Easy Pieces

"These steps enhance your chances for a successful appeal"

By Howard Donovan, as published by Commercial Property Executive Blog, May 2010

When it's tax appeal time, taking the right steps can be critical for winning an assessment dispute. Follow these four steps to make the best case.

  1. 1. Provide current and accurate property information. Review the assessor's property card at least annually and correct any errors. This is also an opportunity to determine if there is reason to dispute the valuation. Consider public records, appraiser credentials, and national cost or capitalization guides. Look for inaccurate information regarding land size or improvements, as well as inaccurate depreciation of improvements.
  2. 2. Make sure the proper party files the administrative protest. In most jurisdictions, only the owner or owner's agent can file a protest or appeal a decision of the administrative board. An agent's authorization by the current owner must be legal or dismissal may result. If there has been an ownership change during the year, determine whether the party filing the appeal is the owner as of the lien date, or as of the payment date. In some states, parties other than the owner can protest, such as tenants or mortgage holders.
  3. Make sure that submitted lease information supports the taxpayer's position as to fair market value. Almost every state requires the assessment of property at fair market value. Not every lease represents the market, however, or results in a proper value calculation.
  4. Make sure that all encumbrances, deed covenants and restrictions, environmental contamination or other impairments are considered in the fair market value determination. Any factor may be considered in determining fair market value, so consider the impact of the state of the property's title, such as easements, conditions and restrictions. Did the assessor compare the asset to similar properties, or to real estate with more profitable uses than those allowed on the taxpayer's property?

These steps enhance your chances for a successful appeal.

hdonovanHoward Donovan is a partner in the Birmingham, AL, law firm of Donovan Fingar, the Alabama member of American Property Tax Counsel, the national affiliation of property tax attorneys. He can be reached at whd@donovanfingar.com.

When Rent is Not Rent?
Easing the Stress of Distressed Properties

American Property Tax Counsel

Recent Published Property Tax Articles

North Carolina Allows Look-Back Tax Exemption For Religious Uses

Lawmakers allow retroactive property tax exemption on religious grounds.

North Carolina has little sympathy for taxpayers that miss filing deadlines, but a new law eases the potential repercussions for property owners otherwise qualifying for religion-based tax exemptions. Under the new measure, taxpayers can apply for the religious exemption from property taxes...

Read more

Subsidies Pose Property Tax Puzzle in Public-Private Partnerships

With the number of public-private partnerships for constructing public facilities on the rise, communities across the country wrestle with the question of how to treat such arrangements for ad valorem property tax purposes. In most instances, private developers and taxing entities take opposing positions on the issue.

Public-private joint ventures have...

Read more

When Property Tax Rates Undermine Asset Value

Rate increases to offset a shrinking property tax base will further erode commercial real estate values.

Across the country, local governments are struggling to maintain revenue amid widespread property value declines, as a result they are resorting to tax rate increases. This funding challenge increases the burden on owners of commercial...

Read more

Member Spotlight

Members

Forgot your password? / Forgot your username?