Life Intelligence

How to protest your DFW property tax assessment: Step by step, deadline included

Your county appraisal district sent you a notice of appraised value. If it seems high, protest it. 65% of Dallas County protests result in a reduction. Source: DCAD annual report.

Deadline: May 15 (or 30 days after the notice is mailed, whichever is later)

Step 1: File the protest

  • Online (fastest): DCAD, TAD, CCAD all have online protest portals
  • By mail: Send a completed Notice of Protest form to your appraisal district
  • In person: Walk into the appraisal district office

Step 2: Gather your evidence

  • Comparable sales: Find 3-5 recent sales of similar homes in your neighborhood that sold for less than your assessed value. Use Zillow, Realtor.com, or your appraisal district's own sales data.
  • Condition issues: Photos of any deferred maintenance, foundation issues, needed repairs that reduce value.
  • Unequal appraisal: If similar homes in your neighborhood are assessed lower, this is an "equity" protest. Pull the appraisal records from your district's website.

Step 3: Informal hearing

  • Most districts schedule an informal hearing first. You sit with an appraiser and present your evidence.
  • 75% of cases settle at this stage. Source: TAD annual report.
  • Be polite, organized, and factual. Present your comps and let the data speak.

Step 4: ARB hearing (if informal fails)

  • The Appraisal Review Board (ARB) is a formal hearing panel
  • You present evidence, the appraisal district presents theirs, the board decides
  • You can still bring an attorney or tax consultant at this stage

Step 5: Further appeals

  • District court (binding arbitration for homes under $1M)
  • SOAH (State Office of Administrative Hearings) for $1M+

DIY vs. hiring a tax consultant:

  • DIY: Free. Works well for straightforward cases.
  • Tax consultant: Typically 33-50% of the savings for one year. Worth it for complex cases or high-value properties.

Sources:

  • Texas Tax Code Chapter 41 (protest procedures)
  • DCAD — protest portal and annual report
  • TAD — protest portal and annual report
  • Texas Comptroller — property tax protest guide

File every year. Even if you don't win, it keeps the appraisal district honest.

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 3:20 PM

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