DFW property taxes are among the highest in the nation. Here's exactly where your money goes and how to fight back.
Average effective property tax rates by city:
- Fort Worth: 2.36%
- Dallas: 2.18%
- Plano: 2.15%
- Frisco: 2.16%
- McKinney: 2.22%
- Arlington: 2.24%
- Southlake: 1.87% (lower rate but higher home values)
Where your tax dollar goes (example: Dallas):
- School district: ~52%
- City of Dallas: ~24%
- Dallas County: ~14%
- Dallas College (DCCCD): ~7%
- Parkland Hospital: ~3%
How to protest (and win):
- File a protest with your county appraisal district by May 15 (or 30 days after notice)
- Gather comps: Find 3-5 comparable homes that sold for less than your appraised value
- Check for errors: square footage, room count, condition
- Attend the informal hearing first — this is where most cases settle
- If informal fails, go to the ARB (Appraisal Review Board) hearing
Success rates: Dallas County CAD informal hearings result in reduction ~65% of the time. Average reduction: $15,000-30,000 in appraised value.
Homestead exemption: File this IMMEDIATELY when you buy. Removes $100,000 from school district taxable value (as of 2024 Prop 4). Saves ~$1,000/year.
Sources:
- Dallas Central Appraisal District — tax rate data
- Collin County CAD — tax rates
- Tarrant County CAD — tax rates
- Texas Comptroller — property tax guides
- Texas Property Code — Chapter 41 (protest procedures)
52% of your property tax going to the school district is wild. Even if you don't have kids, you're funding schools. It's the biggest line item by far.