Friday, April 15, 2011

How To Appeal Your Property Tax Valuation In Maricopa County Arizona

Tired of paying high property taxes? I just appealed my property tax valuation, so I thought I would share the steps for how to do it. This will only be helpful if you live in Maricopa County, AZ. (And actually our property taxes aren't that high compared to some states, but it's still a good idea to appeal if your valuation is inaccurate.)

There are two ways to appeal, administrative and judicial. I will only be talking about the administrative option. (For the judicial, according to the State Board of Equalization, "You may file a petition directly with the Tax Court at any time after receiving the Notice of Value, provided you do not file an administrative appeal - but you must file it no later than December 15. This is the Judicial Process.")

If you hurry, there is still time to appeal your 2012 valuation, which was the one that you should have received recently. The county sends out a postcard in February with your valuation for the following year, which looks about like this:


The deadline for them to send out the postcard is March 1, and then the deadline for you to appeal is 60 days later. So you probably only have another week or so. Get on it!

If you did not receive a postcard, you can see your valuation info online:

  1. Go to the assessor's website
  2. Enter your street number and name (or your parcel number if you know it)
  3. You will be taken to your property info page.
  4. Scroll down to "Valuation Information"

How is the amount of tax determined?

The way the taxes are calculated is quite a complicated mess. It's not imperative that you understand the details of how the taxes are calculated, and I don't really understand it completely myself, so feel free to skip down to the section below about appealing. But here are some basics.

One important thing to understand is that when your assessed valuation goes down from one year to the next, that does not necessarily mean your taxes go down! Your assessed value only determines how much of the pie is your responsibility. So if everyone's valuation went down about the same percentage, then the percentage of the taxes that are your responsibility, or your piece of the pie, would not change.

Your property is identified by a unique parcel number. You will see on your notice of valuation a "full cash value" (FCV) and a "limited property value" (LPV), which are each used to determine different portions of the tax for your parcel. Then there's an assessment ratio which is multiplied by the FCV and LPV to determine the value that they then multiply by some arbitrary "tax rate" to determine your actual amount of tax. You can read more nitty gritty details in the FAQs here.

For owner occupied homes and rental homes, the assessment ratio is always 10%. (It's higher for land and commercial properties.) So if your full cash value was $100,000, then your assessed value would be $100,000 x 10% = $10,000. And if the tax rate was 8%, then your annual property taxes owed would be $10,000 (assessed value) x 8% (tax rate) = $800.

If you are interested in seeing a breakdown of where your taxes are going:

  1. Go back to the assessor's website
  2. Enter your street number and name (or your parcel number)
  3. You will be taken to your property info page.
  4. Click on "View Tax Information"
  5. You will be taken to the treasurer's website.
  6. Click on "Tax Bill" in the upper left hand corner.
  7. Scroll down and you can see all the places your property taxes are being used for. (The majority goes to the school districts.)

Is My Property Valuation Too High?

If you want to appeal your tax valuation, you will need to show that the valuation should have been lower. (At least I'm assuming you want your taxes lowered, not increased.) There are at least 4 ways you can value your property:
  1. Market approach
  2. Cost approach
  3. Income approach
  4. "Equity" approach

Market approach. Using the market approach just means looking at the current market value of your home. So for example if the valuation on your property notice was $100,000 and the comparable sales in your neighborhood show that your home is worth $80,000, then you could argue that your home is worth $80,000, by providing those comps.

Cost approach. Using the cost approach means looking at how much it would cost to build your home. So for example if the valuation on your property notice was $100,000 and you know that it would only cost $80,000 to build your home, then you could argue that your home is worth $80,000, by showing that it would only cost $80,000 to build it (including the purchase of the land). This option is not going to be helpful anytime soon, since the assessments are generally far lower than the cost to build.

Income approach. Using the income approach means looking at how much your property is worth based on how much income it brings it. This would only apply for income (rental) properties.

"Equity" approach. This last one, which I am calling the "equity" approach, just means looking at how much the other properties in your neighborhood were assessed for, and seeing if theirs were assessed for less than yours. If the other similar sized properties in your area were assessed for less than yours, then you have a strong argument that yours should also be assessed for less. So, even if you think the assessed value of your property is equal to or less than current market value, you should still check and make sure that it's also in line with the amounts that your neighbors' properties were assessed for. Otherwise you'll have to pay for more than your share of the pie!

How To Check On The Assessed Values Of The Properties In Your Area

To check on the assessed values of the properties in your area:
  • Go to the Assessor's website.
  • Scroll over "Maps" and click on "GIS Interactive Maps"
  • In the search fields on the right, enter the Street number and Street name (or parcel number) for your property, and click "Submit".
  • Your parcel will be highlighted.
  • On the right, click on the "Valuation Data" tab to see the assessed value, and click on the "Property Data" tab to see the size of your home. (Make sure the square footage is correct. If the assessor has an incorrect value for your home size, that is another factor that you could appeal.)
  • On the map, click on the neighboring lots on your street and in your area. After clicking on each parcel, click on the "Property Data" tab to check the size of the home.


    When you find properties similar in size to yours, click on the "Valuation Data" tab and compare their valuations to yours.

  • If your neighbors with similar sized properties have lower valuations than yours, then you have cause for appeal. You're paying for too much pie! Make a note of the parcel numbers and valuations that support your case.

Appealing the tax valuation

If you decided based on any of the approaches above that you can argue that your home should have a lower valuation, then you can appeal the valuation. To appeal, go to this page on the Assessor's website, enter your parcel number, click "Submit", and then follow the instructions on the form to make your case!

(If you are confident in your case, click on "Yes" for question 8, "CHECK HERE TO REQUEST A MEETING WITH THE ASSESSOR'S OFFICE". According to David Schweikert, former Maricopa County Treasurer, that will help your chances.)

After your appeal, the assessor must consider, decide, and answer your request on or before August 15. If you do not agree with the decision, you can file a petition with the Board of Equalization for the county.

Good luck!

Thursday, July 29, 2010

The Ultimate Downpour

When I showed up for ultimate frisbee tonight around 8 PM it was already raining steadily, but it was warm out so it felt pretty good. I joined the game, and after about 10 or 15 minutes it started raining pretty hard. I wasn't sure whether we would keep playing but we did. Then after another 10 minutes or so the real monsoon showed up and we got a torrential downpour. I literally couldn't see the other players.

We were playing at a park in Tempe, and the field acted somewhat like a retention basin. By the time the rain eased up we were playing in somewhere between 12 and 18 inches of water. But we kept on playing. It felt like I was playing with ankle weights on, but it was actually a lot of fun diving and sliding around in the muck.




 The photos were taken toward the end of the game, long after the rain died down and some of the water drained off. That's me in bright yellow.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Citizen Kane


"Rosebud..."

I finally saw Citizen Cane, the so-called "greatest movie ever made". I thought it was interesting. But I think by "greatest movie" what they mean is "movie with the camera work and effects most ahead of it's time", or "movie involved in the most intriguing hollywood subplot in the 1940s", or "movie that we most like to discuss in cinematography 101". They definitely don't mean "most enjoyable movie". I don't think it was as enjoyable as say, Ironman 2 (the last movie that I saw), or as enjoyable as just about any enjoyable movie. In fact I found it annoying that they mapped out the entire plot (except the rosebud thing) right at the beginning. But apparently it has deep focus photography and nifty fake ceilings made of cloth. Isn't that nice.

I did find the whole story about Orson Welles battling it out with William Randolph Heast pretty fascinating though. My previous knowledge of Hearst was based mostly on the brief mention of him by Joseph Pulitzer in Newsies.

"Rosebud..."

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

I'm Undecided On Proposition 100

On May 18 we in Arizona will vote on Proposition 100. If passed, it will add a one cent sales tax, supposedly for only three years, that will generate about a billion dollars a year to help shore up Arizona's massive budget deficit.

On the one hand, I'm usually against any raising of taxes. And "temporary" taxes have a tendency to become permanent. On the other hand, Arizona really needs the money, and if they don't get it, there will probably be serious cuts to education and public services, among other things. On the other hand, why do they need the money? The answer is simply because they let the budget get out of control when times were good.

The tax increase is essentially a bailout. The state government went on a wild spending spree, and now judgment day has come, and they want the taxpayers to make up for their folly. I'm generally opposed to bailouts on principle, unless they involve bailing me personally out of jail. But fortunately I've never been in jail. I believe in the free market, and letting things work themselves out. So I should probably be opposed to this bailout. However, I hate to see education get cut. That could cause some serious problems for our future workforce, and our ability to attract employers. And think of the children.

I feel a little bad for the governor, because she's trying to clean up somewhat else's mess (JANET?). But I'm not sure if raising taxes is the right way to clean it up.

I received a booklet from the Secretary of State with a bunch of "for" and "against" arguments. Let's see who's arguing...

FOR: Looks like we've got lots of education people, public service groups, blah blah blah. OK you don't want your funding cut, I get it. But also the Chambers of Commerce are for it. Interesting...

AGAINST: Various individuals and politicians... oh what's this, the Goldwater Institute is against it? I oppose any opinion of the Goldwater Institute, also on principle. Those nut jobs are always trying to destroy progress and keep the state from attracting new business. (Hello! You have to give incentives to businesses if you want them to come here and provide jobs! Please get a clue!)

OK, so based on the opinion pages, I'm tempted to vote for it just because the Chambers are for it and the Goldwater psychos are against it. But it's still a bailout, which I hate to see. I'm still undecided.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Sound it out!

My brother asked my 5 year old niece to make a list of fun things to do, and this is what she came up with, as spelled by her. I love it!

I was able to translate each one, can you? It's kind of like that Mad Gab game...
  1. go swimeeg
  2. go to a reschot
  3. woch a movy
  4. hav fun
  5. play the spanish game
  6. ol uv us get a penny
  7. be nise
  8. play with eech uther
  9. go bulleeg
  10. go to the pork
  11. play gams
  12. eet canndy
  13. go to chuckee cheese's
  14. bee happy
  15. by donut's
  16. eet food
  17. mak lemenad
  18. get lecerish
  19. do a pordy
  20. mac stuff
  21. blow bloo's
  22. mace a cayk
  23. go to disnlee land
  24. have a pnicnik
  25. play with zeeko
  26. if someone left, mak a spis
  27. go to the museeume
  28. go on a chresher hunt
  29. jres up
  30. go to sleep
  31. jreec lemunad

Firefox versus Google Chrome

I love a lot of things about Firefox, including the extensions and the general slickness and innovativeness (is that a word?). But I have 2 problems with it:
  1. It takes forever to load.
  2. It's a huge memory hog.
I hadn't tried Google Chrome since it first came out a couple years ago, but after seeing Google actually running commercials to promote it, I thought I would give it another try.

Chrome is a very slick piece of software, and it did solve problem number one -- it's very snappy to start up. The memory hog issue is not quite so clear cut -- Chrome does use less memory initially, but unlike Firefox it seems to use separate processes for separate tabs (or something), and after opening several tabs it starts to hog memory almost as badly as Firefox, if you add up the memory used by all the separate processes.

Chrome of course had a few items in which it didn't measure up to Firefox, although the principal downsides that I found in Chrome are really not in the program itself, but rather in the way it interacts with various complementary software that I use.
  1. My first issue is with ad blocking. Firefox has an awesome Adblock extension that keeps ads from loading. Chrome has a similar extension, but it doesn't work as well. I can't tell if Chrome's ad blocker allows the ads to load first before blocking them, or what exactly the problem is, but it's not as efficient in blocking the ads as Firefox's ad blocker.

  2. My second issue with Chrome (again it's not really with Chrome itself), is how it interacts with del.icio.us bookmarks. In Firefox, the keyword shortcuts for my bookmarks, which are created through del.icio.us, just work (for example, I can set it up so typing "fb" in the address bar will load Facebook.com). In Chrome, it's very odd, but the keyword shortcuts seem to work only some of the time. Sometimes they load the bookmark corresponding to the shortcut, and sometimes they don't do anything.

  3. The third problem that I have with Chrome actually is Chrome's "fault". The problem is with the saving of passwords. A lot of sites, after you log in successfully, will redirect you to a new page. Chrome doesn't handle that situation. Chrome pops up the "do you want to save your password" dialog as expected, but then the dialog disappears immediately after you log in, as soon as the page redirects, so you don't have time to save your password. And there's no way to enter a username and password into the password manager manually. Firefox handles this issue easily, by keeping the dialog open across multiple pages, until you either respond or the dialog times out.

  4. The fourth issue: Firefox's address bar is smarter than Chrome's. Firefox does a better job of predicting what I want after typing a few letters than Chrome does.

Conclusion: This is kind of a cop out conclusion, but I really like both Firefox and Chrome. I wish they would fix their little annoying issues, but overall they're both pretty impressive. I'm having trouble deciding which one I like better.