Deals & Discounts

Property Tax Protest Season 2026: Your complete DFW guide (deadlines, links, step-by-step)

It's that time of year. Appraisal notices are landing in DFW mailboxes. Here's your complete guide to protesting and saving hundreds to thousands of dollars.

Why you should ALWAYS protest:

  • 60-70% of protests result in a reduction (Texas Comptroller data)
  • Average homeowner saves $800-$1,500/year
  • It costs nothing to file — zero risk, high reward
  • You can protest EVERY YEAR

2026 Deadlines:

  • Dallas County (DCAD): File by May 15 at dallascad.org
  • Tarrant County (TAD): File by May 15 at tad.org
  • Collin County (CCAD): File by May 15 at collincad.org
  • Denton County (DCAD): File by May 15 at dentoncad.com

Step-by-step:

  1. Get your appraisal notice (mailed April 1-15, also available online)
  2. File protest online — check BOTH "value is over market" and "unequal appraisal"
  3. Research comparable sales: homes similar to yours that sold for less
  4. Research unequal appraisals: neighbors' homes appraised lower than yours
  5. Attend informal hearing (phone or in-person) with your evidence
  6. If not satisfied, escalate to ARB formal hearing

Best evidence:

  • 3-5 comparable sales within 1 mile, same size/age/condition
  • Neighbor appraisals from the appraisal district's own website
  • Photos of any defects: foundation cracks, old roof, outdated interior
  • Professional appraisal if you have one

Source: Texas Tax Code Ch. 41, each county appraisal district's protest procedures

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 2:38 AM

5 Comments

Protesting for the 7th year in a row. Saved over $8,000 total on my McKinney home. It takes 30 minutes of prep. Just do it.

DCAD website tip: use their property search to find your neighbors appraisals. If anyone on your street is lower per square foot, thats your evidence. Its on THEIR website.

If you hate paperwork, Ownwell does it for 25% of savings. They only charge if they win. I use them every year. Worth it for the convenience.

Tarrant County folks: TAD is aggressive on initial appraisals but the informal hearing adjusters are reasonable. Bring your comps printed out.

New homeowner tip: your first year appraisal is often way off because they use the sale price. Protest it immediately.