If I may ...
Has anyone successfully arm wrestled Chuck County in their property taxes and if so, how did you go about it? With all of this growth you would think your property taxes might go down but it seems otherwise. I’m not an economist but maybe I’m hoping too much. NBF
There are three ways to challenge your property assessment.
- Upon receipt of an assessment notice;
- By a petition for review; and
- Upon purchase of property between January 1 and June 30.
Once you get your triennial assessment for your property, you have 45 days in which to challenge the assessment. Fill out the form and send in back to the State Assessors office. You can choose to have them re-evaluate the assessment either with a personal hearing, (a hearing appointment will be made), a phone hearing, or a written appeal. (I always do the in person route. That way questions can be asked, face-to-face about methodology, etc..) If you are still not satisfied with their assessment you can appeal that decision. A date will be set for you to appear before a
Property Tax Assessment Appeal Board, (individuals appointed by by the Governor with input from each local jurisdiction). If still not satisfied with a decision form the Appeal Board, the third and final step is Maryland Tax Court. (The free ones. You could go to a higher level of appeal, to the courts, but will require a lawyer). For this appeal, you must appear in person. If you've made it this far, you must supply all evidence as to why you think the assessment should be lowered, as nothing prior to this appeal, from the first two appeals, is considered. Do your own research, get comparable sales of properties as nearly exactly to your property within your property's area, say about a 5 to 10 mile radius.
Look online for those 'like' properties and compare the assessments. Visit, drive by, and look at the condition of those properties. Argue the condition of your property, such as 30 year old leaking roof, no HVAC unit, only baseboard heat, interior of house never updated from the 50's, 60's, or 70's, never modernized, etc.. In essence, though you may love your home, you kinda want to make it appear decrepit, but livable. The State may send an appraiser out to do a more through and complete appraisal for determination.
For more information ...
https://dat.maryland.gov/realproperty/Pages/Assessment-Appeal-Process.aspx