Could be back to the property vs. Income tax discussion. If you are unemployed you won't pay income taxes.
Aggie71013 said:
Could be back to the property vs. Income tax discussion. If you are enemployed you won't pay income taxes.
SquanchyAg said: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....
I welcome it. That's how we get the undesirables out of our neighborhood.Frok said:Aggie71013 said:
Could be back to the property vs. Income tax discussion. If you are enemployed you won't pay income taxes.
Feel like I'm screwed either way.
I think my property tax should be assessed by how much I bought my house for. My house has doubled in price since I bought it and it very well could price me out to where I need to move. Crazy.
At that high a rate, you can bet your sweet bippy that many sales will be done off record with crypto and cash to avoid taxes.LostInLA07 said:
I'd much prefer a use / consumption tax. Frankly I'd rather we have a national and state sales tax rate around 25% vs the current income tax and property tax schemes. It's much harder for a government to redistribute wealth and socially engineer behavior with a sales tax. And individuals gain a lot more control over their tax liability.
Also much easier to administer, harder for people to avoid paying or cheat on, and WAY less individual administrative burden.
https://www.hataxgroup.com/ - McGibblets group.K_P said:
1. They increased my square footage by ~400 SF, but we didn't do anything to our house. It has been the same size since 1961. I am positive of that fact. WTF?
2. Does anyone have protest firms they recommend? With my work schedule I need to farm this out.
Martin Q. Blank said:I welcome it. That's how we get the undesirables out of our neighborhood.Frok said:Aggie71013 said:
Could be back to the property vs. Income tax discussion. If you are enemployed you won't pay income taxes.
Feel like I'm screwed either way.
I think my property tax should be assessed by how much I bought my house for. My house has doubled in price since I bought it and it very well could price me out to where I need to move. Crazy.
I got the exact same treatment in the Katy part of Fort Bend CountyAggieChemE09 said:
2021 - X
2022 - 1.28X
Fort Bend County
Sugar Land
Thanks. Although I kind of agree that my home has appreciated in appraisal value after being artificially stagnant for the past 6 years.Teddy Perkins said:https://www.hataxgroup.com/ - McGibblets group.K_P said:
1. They increased my square footage by ~400 SF, but we didn't do anything to our house. It has been the same size since 1961. I am positive of that fact. WTF?
2. Does anyone have protest firms they recommend? With my work schedule I need to farm this out.
my apologies. I guess I just assumed you were another one of the hipster millenials on here. I didn't read every post.htxag09 said:SquanchyAg said: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....
Lmao. Way to assume and completely miss the point. My point wasn't that I didn't want to "pay my share" or that it "wasn't fair." My point was simply that there is more to comparing states with higher property taxes vs state income tax vs higher sales taxes then just trying to convert to an equivalent percentage.
I'm not sure why that's directed at me. I protest every year.12thMan9 said:Mr. AGSPRT04 said:Up 21% in Timbergrove. They doubled the value of my improvements and kept land value the same. I guess because I tore down an old 8x15 shed and replaced it with a new 8x15 shed?TX04Aggie said:
Market and appraisal about the same. Up 9% in Timbergrove.
How did they know?
If you're not fighting your property taxes EVERY year, shame on you.
I have the same question. Mine's up 35% and I don't see how I could possibly protest it down to below the 10% it's capped at. Am I misunderstanding something or am I just gonna have to bend over and take 10% increases going forward?GoAgs92 said:
So my house is for sure worth more than the 10% cap increase, not 34% but how do tax protest companies make money in this case….the taxed value won't be going down basically no matter what.
BowSowy said:I have the same question. Mine's up 35% and I don't see how I could possibly protest it down to below the 10% it's capped at. Am I misunderstanding something or am I just gonna have to bend over and take 10% increases going forward?GoAgs92 said:
So my house is for sure worth more than the 10% cap increase, not 34% but how do tax protest companies make money in this case….the taxed value won't be going down basically no matter what.
Quote:
It is either or. You get to pick.
My fee is on a year to year basis. I do not believe in auto renewals. I ask for the business every year. Your fee is for that 1 year only not for multiples(never heard of that).
I am not allowed(neither are you) to discuss appraised value when arguing valuation unless it was an exemption issue. So the % fee is based solely on the reduction of market value only.