BuffaloREV said:
any strong opinions re: "the best" tax advisor to use for protest? (I am def not doing it myself).
https://www.hataxgroup.com/
Owned by an Aggie who posts on this site.
BuffaloREV said:
any strong opinions re: "the best" tax advisor to use for protest? (I am def not doing it myself).
Texaggie7nine said:
Bought our house in 77068 in Dec 21. HCAD shows +45% from 21 value with no improvements since and +15% over appraised value and purchase price.
Can I include our appraisal in Dec of 21 as evidence or only current comps?
Also, I went to Jubally.com and tried the property report summary and for "Market Value" it is about 18% lower than what I see on HCAD, but it says the "Market Value" is "The 2022 Market Value for this property as reported by the county in the public records".
So does that mean the market value it is showing is what HCAD is giving it? Because I see a way higher number on HCAD?
cgh1999 said:BuffaloREV said:
any strong opinions re: "the best" tax advisor to use for protest? (I am def not doing it myself).
https://www.hataxgroup.com/
Owned by an Aggie who posts on this site.
What is the flat fee?Mr. McGibblets said:
I also hear if you mention TexAgs, you get $50 off of the flat fee if you choose that route.
AggieT said:What is the flat fee?Mr. McGibblets said:
I also hear if you mention TexAgs, you get $50 off of the flat fee if you choose that route.
Couple of questions,Mr. McGibblets said:
$0-$499,999- $250 Flat Fee
$500,000-$999,999- $350 Flat Fee
$1,000,000-$1,499,999- $450 Flat Fee
$1,500,000-$1,999,999- $550 Flat Fee
$2,000,000 and up-$650 Flat Fee
My other fee is a contingency fee of 40%. This is calculated from the market value. If I don't reduce your market value then you pay $0. If I reduce your market value and it calculates to $1,000 in tax difference, then your fee would be $400.
TXTransplant said:Cromagnum said:TXTransplant said:Cromagnum said:
Yep. Capping the year over year increase to 10% is the key here. People that bought homes in 2021 are going to get hammered really soon.
Exactly. I don't even really give a flip about the "discount" on my tax bill due to the $20k exemption (or whatever it is) because the biggest taxing entity I pay (the ISD) doesn't even honor it. They tax us on the full assessed value, HE or not. The reduction in my tax bill is minimal.
But the 10% cap is huge.
The ISD doesn't honor the reduction in assessed value? That's a new one to me.
I don't believe they do. I know at least one of my taxing entities doesn't, and I'm pretty sure it's the ISD. I'll double check, though.
They also refused to recognized the temporary revised assessments HCAD did for the properties that flooded during Harvey.
TriAg2010 said:
-+3% in 77043. Pretty shocked by that given the listings on my street. I will take it.
Meanwhile, USAA is raising my homeowners policy premium 20% at the next renewal in May. Estimated rebuild cost is now $200/SF.
Sea Speed said:
Isaa is the worst with homeowners. Get a quote from liere
I'm having a hard time following. Are you insinuating that the homeowner was underinsured and lost their house or that they took the insurance money for the structure and are just selling the lot?TXTransplant said:
There was a house in my hood that caught fire (lightening strike) a while back. I think it was spring 2019. It was a $700k-ish home when it burned. Owners scraped the lot and finally sold it to a developer last August.
one MEEN Ag said:I'm having a hard time following. Are you insinuating that the homeowner was underinsured and lost their house or that they took the insurance money for the structure and are just selling the lot?TXTransplant said:
There was a house in my hood that caught fire (lightening strike) a while back. I think it was spring 2019. It was a $700k-ish home when it burned. Owners scraped the lot and finally sold it to a developer last August.
Is there a point where you max out your bandwidth and can't take on new clients? Thinking about letting you handle mine instead of using the Jubally report and doing it myself. Too much going on with work to deal with it this year.Mr. McGibblets said:
$0-$499,999- $250 Flat Fee
$500,000-$999,999- $350 Flat Fee
$1,000,000-$1,499,999- $450 Flat Fee
$1,500,000-$1,999,999- $550 Flat Fee
$2,000,000 and up-$650 Flat Fee
My other fee is a contingency fee of 40%. This is calculated from the market value. If I don't reduce your market value then you pay $0. If I reduce your market value and it calculates to $1,000 in tax difference, then your fee would be $400.
Jubally has to wait on HCAD to release their data to them. It's coming soon.Teddy Perkins said:
+26% in 77096/Meyerland. +18% in land value! Jubally needs to hurry up with their data/reports. Going to be a busy year for them.
unequal appraisal. see how they have valued similar homes in your neighborhood vs. yours.AlaskanAg99 said:
I don't even know how I could protest my uptick. Every house around me is selling for way more than even my upward increase was. Basically, what proof do I have? None. I want to protest, but it doesn't feel like there's any point or way to victory.
Diggity said:unequal appraisal. see how they have valued similar homes in your neighborhood vs. yours.AlaskanAg99 said:
I don't even know how I could protest my uptick. Every house around me is selling for way more than even my upward increase was. Basically, what proof do I have? None. I want to protest, but it doesn't feel like there's any point or way to victory.
wait... so you don't think it's fair for you to pay your normal property tax bill because you didn't work for 6 months of the year during covid? what did you do during those 6 months? hang out at the beach all day? sure, we'll pay your share for you. poor thing. wow.htxag09 said:
Not to mention other variables like still having a $1k/month tax bill when you're retired and "own" your home.
Or like me during COVID and being unemployed for 6ish months, still have that property tax bill at the end of the year....