Dallas Central Appraisal District (DCAD) is the second largest appraisal district in Texas, encompassing portions of the Dallas metro area. It’s responsible for accurately valuing $350 billion in Dallas County home property valuations. Dallas county’s residential property values are the starting point for the taxes levied by the various taxing jurisdictions across Dallas County; however DCAD does not set your tax rate. The values set by DCAD impact the taxable value of your property, what your property taxes are based on. A lower value means lower taxes for you.
DCAD accomplishes this by appraising one third each year. Thus, any one property’s appraisal may remain unchanged from year to year. If your property is not reappraised, the district is not obligated to send you a Value Notice. Regardless of your appraisal status, Property Tax Protest highly recommends you protesting your property value every year. Protesting is the only way to determine if your property value is appropriately justified.
You can find out your most recent property value for Dallas County by visiting the Appraisal District Site here and entering your property information.
The Dallas Appraisal District handles matters only concerning property values, protests, and exemptions. It does not set the amount of taxes charged against your property; that is done by the jurisdictions like cities, towns, school districts, hospital districts and others that set tax rates which, when applied to DCAD’s valuations, will be sufficient to fund their operations.
You can learn more, as well as find a list of current tax jurisdictions covered by Dallas County CAD here.
Tax protest is the most direct way to resolve any disputes or disagreements that you have with the valuation of your property and the only way to protest your Texas property taxes. Your right to protest is enshrined in the Texas Constitution. Its roots hearken back to “No taxation without representation” which motivated the thirteen colonies to revolt against English rule.
It is important that you protest your property value every year. If you do not protest while others do and they obtain reductions one result is that you will pay more to make up for their property tax savings. The tax rate set by the taxing jurisdictions will need to increase to offset the aggregate reductions granted to successful protesters.
The protest process is complex. Many owners neglect to use all the relevant grounds for appeal to the Appraisal Review Board. For homeowners these include both Value Above Market (comparable sales) and also Inequality of Assessment (comparable assessments).
You can find more information here on the types of protests you are entitled to, as well as a detailed account of the different types of property values and terms you will encounter during the protest process.
To evaluate at least one third of $350 billion in property values each year Dallas Central Appraisal District uses Mass Appraisal techniques which evaluate properties in large batches rather than individually. In any one year, Dallas County is responsible for appraising over $100 billion in property values. Mass appraisal is only an estimate of value using systems and logical analysis of data, not separate appraisals.
But the Texas Property Tax Code requires individual characteristics that affect a property's market value also be evaluated in determining that property's market value (Section 23.01). Thus, the basis for a taxpayer’s protest is that individual characteristics of the property were not sufficiently considered when DCAD used mass appraisal techniques. That is the heart of your argument. To win a property tax reduction at the Appraisal Review Board an owner or agent must be able to demonstrate how those characteristics differentiate the property from the mass.
You know your property better than the appraisal district does. Property Tax Protest believes you should use that expertise to differentiate your property from the other properties in the county used to support their value for your property.
Dallas Central Appraisal District also adjudicates taxpayers’ requests for exemptions which reduce their tax burdens.
Paying your property taxes on time is important to prevent interest or penalties. The exemptions on file can cause slight deviation from the deadline, so it is important for the homeowner to understand the specific due dates on the property.
No, in fact there are positive implications that will prolong the life of any reduction you obtain. The Texas Property Tax Code specifies that “In the next tax year in which the property is appraised (following a successful protest), the chief appraiser may not increase the appraised value of the property unless the increase by the chief appraiser is reasonably supported by clear and convincing evidence. . . . The burden of proof is on the chief appraiser to support an increase...” Texas Property Tax Code, Section 23.01(e).
Property Tax Protest will take care of the entire protest process by doing the following:
If you are not satisfied with the result of the Appraisal Review Board hearing you have further options with which Property Tax Protest can assist you. You can:
Don’t pay more than your fair share of property taxes