Hey, so you’ve just snagged a new place—congrats on the house! But wait, before you get all cozy, there’s this little thing you might want to check out: your property tax assessment. Yeah, I know, it sounds boring, but trust me, it might save you a chunk of change.
Here’s the deal. The local tax folks use this assessment to figure out how much your property is worth so they can tax you. If they’ve flubbed those numbers, you could be chucking extra money into the wind. And who wants that?
Now, I’m not a lawyer—heck, I barely passed math—but Sal Cataldo, a real estate lawyer (fancy, right?), mentions you probably have everything you need to challenge any wonkiness in your assessment. You’ve got the title report, maybe a home inspection deal, and other paperwork from buying the place. Oh, and don’t forget your appraisal and mortgage docs—those might show if your neighborhood’s value got it all wrong.
Cataldo’s basically saying, “You’ve got all this info, might as well use it.” Seems smart to me.
Quick pause for a side quest: Apparently, property sales wake the tax beast—new ownership equals reassessment time. But who knows when or how much they’ll adjust. Sometimes it feels like they decide on the back nine of a golf course while munching sandwiches.
Okay, back to why it matters. Property taxes are ballooning. And that’s not just your imagination after looking at your mortgage and grocery bills. In 2024, the typical tax bill hit $3,500, and that’s more than the previous year, according to some Realtor report that sounds legit.
What you pay kinda depends on your zip code. Like, NYC folks are forking over nearly 10 grand on average! Insane. And over on the West Coast, San Jose and San Francisco aren’t far behind. Makes you wonder if they charge extra just for the sunshine and artisanal lattes.
Now here’s where it gets juicy. Sometimes, properties are over-assessed—meaning you’re overpaying just ‘cause of some clerical hiccup. Pete Sepp, who sounds like he knows a thing or two, says it’s worth a peek. Stuff like wrong square footage or mysterious extra bathrooms can mess things up. The National Taxpayers Union Foundation reckons a staggering chunk of properties are over-assessed. Big yikes.
Winning an appeal could shave dollars off your tax bill for years. States play by their own rules, though—some reassess yearly, others kinda wing it whenever. Anyway, around four in ten homeowners could save some serious cash by speaking up, maybe around $539 annually per Realtor.com.
So, yeah, maybe pencil in a tax review amidst your unpacking chaos. Could be worth it. Or not. No pressure.