Property Tax Estimator
Estimate your annual property taxes based on home value, assessment ratio, and local mill rates.
Property Details
Percentage of market value used for tax assessment (varies by location)
Combined rate for county, city, school district, etc.
Annual Property Tax
Tax Calculation Breakdown
Effective Tax Rate
Future Tax Projections
| Year | Home Value | Annual Tax | Monthly |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | $408,000 | $10,200 | $850 |
| Year 2 | $416,160 | $10,404 | $867 |
| Year 3 | $424,483 | $10,612 | $884 |
| Year 5 | $441,632 | $11,041 | $920 |
| Year 10 | $487,598 | $12,190 | $1,016 |
Mill Rate Comparison
| Mill Rate | Annual Tax | Monthly |
|---|---|---|
| 15 mills | $6,000 | $500 |
| 20 mills | $8,000 | $667 |
| 25 mills(current) | $10,000 | $833 |
| 30 mills | $12,000 | $1,000 |
| 35 mills | $14,000 | $1,167 |
| 40 mills | $16,000 | $1,333 |
Property Tax Estimator Guide
A property tax estimator helps you approximate annual and monthly property tax based on home value, assessment ratio, mill rate, exemptions, and special assessments. Property tax rules are local, so the best estimate comes from county or city tax records.
Property tax is important because it affects monthly escrow payments and long-term affordability. A home with a lower mortgage payment can still be expensive if taxes are high.
| Term | Meaning | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Market value | Estimated property value | Often the starting point |
| Assessed value | Taxable value after local assessment rules | May differ from market value |
| Exemption | Reduction for qualifying owners | Can lower taxable value |
| Mill rate | Tax per $1,000 of taxable value | Used to calculate tax owed |
| Special assessment | Extra charge for local improvements or services | May not be deductible as property tax |
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter home value. Use purchase price or current market estimate.
- Add assessment ratio. Some areas tax only a percentage of market value.
- Enter mill rate. One mill equals $1 per $1,000 of taxable value.
- Add exemptions. Include homestead, senior, veteran, or other local exemptions if you qualify.
- Add special assessments. Include separate charges shown on the tax bill.
Property Tax Formula
Most property tax estimates follow the same basic path: determine taxable value, apply the local rate, then add special assessments.
Annual Property Tax
Where:
- Assessment Ratio= Percentage of value subject to tax
- Mill Rate= Tax rate per $1,000 of taxable value
- Exemptions= Local reductions applied before tax is calculated
Common Property Tax Mistakes
- Using only a national average. Property taxes are local and can vary sharply.
- Ignoring reassessment after purchase. Taxes may change after the sale price is recorded.
- Missing exemptions. Homestead or other exemptions may require an application.
- Confusing assessments with taxes. Some charges are service fees or local benefit assessments, not real estate tax.
Worked Examples
Basic Mill Rate Estimate
Problem:
A home is worth $400,000, assessed at 100%, with a 25 mill rate and no exemptions.
Solution Steps:
- 1Assessed value: $400,000 x 100% = $400,000
- 2Tax base per $1,000: $400,000 / 1,000 = 400
- 3Annual tax: 400 x 25 = $10,000
- 4Monthly escrow estimate: $10,000 / 12 = $833
Result:
Estimated property tax is $10,000 per year, or about $833 per month.
Estimate with Exemption
Problem:
A $300,000 home has an 80% assessment ratio, a $25,000 exemption, and a 20 mill rate.
Solution Steps:
- 1Assessed value: $300,000 x 80% = $240,000
- 2Taxable value: $240,000 - $25,000 = $215,000
- 3Annual tax: ($215,000 / 1,000) x 20 = $4,300
Result:
Estimated property tax is $4,300 per year before any special assessments.
Tips & Best Practices
- ✓Check the local assessor record before making an offer.
- ✓Ask whether the home will be reassessed after sale.
- ✓Apply for exemptions on time if you qualify.
- ✓Include taxes in monthly affordability, not only annual planning.
- ✓Separate special assessments from deductible real estate taxes when reviewing tax records.
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources & References
Last updated: 2026-05-20
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Editorial Note
MyCalcBuddy Editorial Team
This page is maintained as an educational calculator reference.
Formula Source: Standard Mathematical References
by Various