Why Your Property Tax Bill Keeps Climbing, Even as Home Prices Cool

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Imagine opening your property tax notice and doing a double-take. The number is higher, again. You have been reading that the housing market has cooled off. Prices in your neighborhood have not done anything dramatic. So why does it feel like your county never got that memo?

It is a fair question, and the honest answer is this: what you are seeing right now is a delayed reaction. The dramatic home price surge of 2021 and 2022, when the typical home gained 30-40% in value in under two years, is only now showing up fully in what your county says your home is worth. Assessors lag the market. Reassessment cycles can stretch one, two, or even four-plus years. And when those cycles close, the full weight of that pandemic-era boom lands on your bill, in a single year.

You are not imagining it. You are not alone. And there are things you can actually do about it.

$4,427 Average annual property tax bill per U.S. homeowner (2025)
+3.7% Total growth in property tax collections nationwide vs. 2024
0.90% National effective tax rate: highest since 2020
$396.8B Total property taxes levied on U.S. single-family homes in 2025

Source: ATTOM 2025 Annual Property Tax Analysis, April 2026

 

The Ghost of 2021 Still Lives in Your Tax Bill

 

Here is the mechanism. Property taxes are based on your home's assessed value, which is your local government's estimate of what your home is worth. But that estimate does not update in real time. Most counties reassess on an annual, biennial, or triennial schedule. Some reassess every four or five years.

Between early 2020 and mid-2022, home values across the U.S. rose by a staggering 30-40%, according to Zillow Research. Even in counties that assess annually, assessors tend to lag the open market by 12-18 months. That means the full force of that price surge has been slowly rolling forward, hitting homeowners in waves, not all at once.

Why are property taxes still rising even as home prices cool?

Property taxes are calculated based on assessed values, which are updated on a cycle, not in real time. When home prices surged 30-40% during 2021-2022, many counties had not yet reassessed. As those reassessment cycles complete in 2025 and 2026, homeowners are receiving updated assessments that reflect the pandemic-era price peak, regardless of whether the market has since cooled. Between 2019 and 2024, national property taxes rose 30% in total.

The result: a "delayed tax shock" that hits after the boom is already over.

 

Knox County, Tennessee, offers a vivid example. After five years without a reassessment, the county issued new property valuations and the average home value jumped 40% overnight. For Cook County, Illinois, the 2025 second-installment bills averaged a 16% increase. In some neighborhoods it was far worse: West Garfield Park homeowners saw increases exceeding 133%.

The pattern is consistent: the longer the reassessment gap, the bigger the shock when it finally arrives.

The Tax Map Worth Bookmarking: Highest and Lowest States

 

Not every homeowner feels this equally. Where you live determines the baseline, and the gap between the highest and lowest property tax states is stark. New Jersey's average bill is more than ten times that of West Virginia's. Here is how the extremes compare:

State Effective Tax Rate Avg. Annual Bill Tier
5 Highest Property Tax States
New Jersey1.58%~$9,400+Highest in U.S.
Connecticut1.36%~$6,500+Top 5
New Hampshire1.29%~$6,000+Top 5
Massachusetts1.12%~$5,800+Top 5
New York1.23%~$5,900+Top 5
5 Lowest Property Tax States
Hawaii0.28%~$2,385Lowest in U.S.
Alabama0.41%~$700-$900Bottom 5
Wyoming0.56%~$1,500-$1,900Bottom 5
Arizona0.62%~$1,800-$2,100Bottom 5
Idaho0.44%~$1,600-$2,000Bottom 5

*Average annual bills are estimates based on ATTOM data, Kiplinger, and WalletHub 2026 rankings. Actual bills vary by county and home value.

If you live in a high-tax state and your assessed value just caught up to the 2021-2022 surge, you may be looking at a bill that has moved significantly in just a year or two. Understanding your effective rate (the percentage of your home's estimated value that goes to taxes) is the first step to knowing whether your bill is in line with the norm or worth challenging.

Reassessment Cycles: How Last Year's Boom Becomes This Year's Bill

 

A staggered reassessment cycle is exactly what it sounds like: counties do not all update home values at the same time, or even on the same schedule. Some reassess every year. Others do it every two or three. A handful go four or five years between full reassessments.

What is a staggered reassessment cycle?

A staggered reassessment cycle is a county-level schedule for updating the assessed value of properties. Instead of updating all values annually to reflect current market conditions, many jurisdictions reassess on a 1-4 year cycle. When home prices rise sharply during a period between assessments, homeowners receive a "compressed" update, absorbing multiple years of appreciation in a single notice. This is the primary driver of the property tax shock many homeowners are experiencing in 2025 and 2026.

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What this means practically: if your county reassessed in 2019 and then again in 2024, your new assessed value might be reflecting five years of price changes all at once. That includes the full 2021-2022 surge. Even if your home's market value has softened since then, the new assessment could still represent a dramatic jump from where you were last taxed.

States with multi-year reassessment cycles, including parts of New York, Illinois, Ohio, and Georgia, have seen some of the steepest single-year jumps for exactly this reason. It is not that these counties are taxing more aggressively. They are just catching up to reality, all at once.

"Your county is not taxing harder. They are just finally billing you for 2021."

How to Read Your Assessment Notice and When to Push Back

 

Your assessment notice is not your tax bill. It is a snapshot: your county's current estimate of what your home is worth. You have every right to challenge it, and more people should. Between 40 and 60 percent of property tax appeals result in a reduction, and a successful appeal typically saves the average homeowner $500 or more per year.

When your notice arrives, here is what to look at first:

1. Check the facts on your property record

 

Your county keeps a Property Record Card listing your home's square footage, bedroom count, bathroom count, lot size, and condition. Clerical errors (wrong square footage, a basement counted as finished when it is not, an extra bathroom that does not exist) are more common than you would think. In 2026, these remain the number one cause of overvaluation. If the facts are wrong, the assessor is often legally required to correct the value immediately.

2. Understand your assessed value vs. market value

 

Many states do not tax you on 100% of your home's market value. They apply an assessment ratio first. In Tennessee, for example, the residential assessment ratio is 25%, so a $400,000 home should have an assessed value of $100,000. If your notice shows a number that exceeds the expected ratio, that is worth questioning.

3. Find recent comparable sales

 

Look for three to five homes similar to yours in age, style, size, and neighborhood that sold within the past 12 months. If those homes sold for less than what your county says your home is worth, that is the core of your appeal case. Pull these from Zillow, Realtor.com, or your county's online records.

4. Know your deadline and do not miss it

 

Most jurisdictions give you 30-45 days from the date of your assessment notice to file an appeal. Miss that window and you are locked into the assessed value for the full cycle, which could be another year, two years, or more depending on your county.

Should You Appeal Your Property Tax Assessment?

Check all that apply to your situation, then see the verdict below.

 

If you decide to appeal, the process typically involves filing a simple form with your county assessor's office, submitting your evidence (comparable sales, photos of property condition, corrected facts), and attending a brief informal hearing. Many counties allow you to do this entirely online. You do not need a lawyer, though for high-value properties, a property tax consultant can be worth the fee.

Fixed-Income Homeowners Are Feeling This the Hardest

 

For most working households, a higher property tax bill is an unwelcome surprise. But for retirees and those living on fixed incomes (Social Security, pensions, modest retirement savings) it is something more serious. It is a monthly budget disruption that does not have an easy offset.

Data from April 2026 shows that seniors in many states are experiencing property tax jumps of 9-15% year over year. Unlike a working household that might absorb a higher bill through a raise or additional hours, a retiree's income generally does not flex upward. The bill just takes a bigger slice of what is there.

There is a meaningful and underused option here: most states offer senior property tax exemption programs. Some reduce taxable assessed value by 50-65%; others freeze assessed values at a fixed year. Texas recently expanded its senior exemption to an additional $60,000. New York offers reductions of up to 65% of assessed value for qualifying seniors. If you or someone in your household is 61 or older, it is worth calling your county assessor's office to ask specifically about senior exemptions. Many homeowners who qualify simply do not know to ask.

The cost of staying is not just about mortgage payments anymore. It is property taxes, maintenance, insurance: a full stack of costs that tends to grow year after year, regardless of what the housing market does.

 

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Frequently Asked Questions About Property Taxes

Why did my property tax go up when home prices are falling?

Property tax assessments are based on historical data, not current market prices. If your county recently completed a reassessment cycle, it likely reflects home values from 2021 or 2022, when prices peaked, not today's cooler market. Reassessment cycles can lag the market by 1-4 years, meaning bills can rise even as current prices stabilize or decline.

What is an effective property tax rate?

The effective property tax rate is the actual property taxes paid divided by the estimated market value of the home, expressed as a percentage. In 2025, the national effective tax rate for single-family homes was 0.90%, according to ATTOM. This differs from the nominal tax rate set by local governments, since many states apply assessment ratios that reduce the taxable base before the rate is applied.

How do I appeal my property tax assessment?

To appeal your property tax assessment, start by reviewing your Property Record Card for factual errors (incorrect square footage, room counts, or property condition). Then gather 3-5 comparable home sales from the past 12 months to show your home may be overvalued. File a formal appeal with your county assessor's office within the deadline on your notice, typically 30-45 days. Between 40 and 60 percent of appeals result in a reduction, saving the average homeowner $500 or more per year.

Which state has the highest property taxes in the U.S.?

New Jersey has the highest property tax burden in the United States, with an effective tax rate of approximately 1.58% and average annual bills exceeding $9,400. Connecticut, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and New York round out the top five highest-tax states. Hawaii has the lowest effective property tax rate at 0.28%, followed by Alabama and Idaho.

Are there property tax relief programs for seniors?

Yes. Most states offer property tax exemption or freeze programs for seniors, typically beginning at age 61-65. Texas now provides an additional $60,000 senior exemption, and New York offers eligible seniors reductions of up to 65% of their home's assessed value. Contact your county assessor's office to ask about senior exemptions. Many qualifying homeowners never claim them simply because they do not know the programs exist.

What happens to property taxes if I do a sale-leaseback?

In a sale-leaseback, you sell your home to an investor and remain as a renter. The investor becomes the legal owner, which means property taxes, maintenance, and insurance become the investor's responsibility. You pay rent under a lease agreement and are no longer subject to property tax assessments, annual increases, or the appeal process. For homeowners whose rising ownership costs are putting financial pressure on their budget, this can be a meaningful shift.

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