Appeal strategy
Value vs uniformity: two different ways a property tax assessment can be wrong.
A strong appeal is not just "my tax bill is too high." It explains whether the county overestimated fair market value, treated similar homes unequally, or both.
What a value appeal argues
A value appeal says the county's fair market value is too high. The core question is what the property would likely sell for as of the valuation date, considering size, age, location, condition, and market sales.
- Recent sales of similar homes support a lower value.
- The county used stale, superior, or mismatched comps.
- The home has condition issues a buyer would discount.
- The property characteristics are wrong.
What a uniformity appeal argues
A uniformity appeal says the property is assessed higher than similar properties, even if the county believes the market value is defensible. A nearby superior property assessed lower can be powerful evidence.
- Same neighborhood properties with similar traits are assessed lower.
- Newer, larger, or better-condition homes are valued below the subject.
- The subject property is being treated inconsistently compared with the assessment pattern.
Why homeowners often need both
Value and uniformity are different arguments, but they can support each other. If nearby sales suggest a lower market value and superior neighbors are assessed lower, the appeal packet should show both.
Evidence checklist
| Evidence | Best for value | Best for uniformity |
|---|---|---|
| Recent sale comps | Yes | Sometimes |
| Lower-assessed similar homes | Sometimes | Yes |
| Repair invoices and estimates | Yes | Sometimes |
| Photos of condition problems | Yes | Sometimes |
| Incorrect county property data | Yes | Yes |
How Appeal Watch builds this
Appeal Watch separates the arguments in the packet: value evidence, uniformity comps, condition proof, and a concise filing statement. That keeps the appeal focused instead of emotional.