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All You Want to Know About Your Property Tax Bill but Were Afraid to Ask. Karl Green UW Extension – La Crosse County. All You W anted to Know A bout P roperty T axes but W ere Afraid to Ask. What is a levy? What is a mil?
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All You Want to Know About Your Property Tax Bill but Were Afraid to Ask • Karl Green • UW Extension – La Crosse County
All You Wanted to Know About Property Taxes but Were Afraid to Ask • What is a levy? • What is a mil? • What’s the difference between your assessment and an appraisal? • What’s an assessment? • An assessment ratio? What is the difference between a lower assessment ratio and a higher assessment ratio? • What is equalized value?
Who pays property taxes? • You do! • Any property owner • Home owner • Land owners • Ag (Use-value assessing) • Forest (MFL, Ag. forest, etc.) • Business owners • Even renters pay taxes (although perhaps not directly…) • Property doesn’t have to be stationary • Personal property (income generation)
Are all Property’s assessed the same • No: Use value, MFL • What is use value assessment? • Specifically, the assessment value of agricultural land was changed from market value to use value. In a use value assessment system, the use of the land is the most important factor in determining its assessed value. • http://www.revenue.wi.gov/pubs/slf/pb061.pdf
Your property is assessed by: • Municipal assessor (assessing department), or • Independent Assessing contractor acting on your municipality’s behalf • Your property is typically calculated on two components: • Land • Improvements • Combination of this is your Total Assessed Value • Your property’s value can be determined a few main ways: • Market Sale of property • Comparison of like properties • Income generation ability (rental or commercial in particular) • Replacement value/insured value
Total Assessed Value: Total value of your property, distributed between your land value and improvement value • Estimated Fair Market Value: The estimated value of your property, determined statistically by DOR through annual “arms length sales” • Arms Length Sales are sales between a willing buyer and a willing seller, and not influenced by some non-typical circumstance
Assessed Value vs. Est. Fair Market Assessed value Estimated Fair Market value Estimate!!! Calculation based on historical sales submitted to DOR by assessor (Full/Equalized Value) These calculations help establish the Assessment Ratio • Determined by your municipal assessor, based on: • Historical sales in the municipality over the past year • Inspections following building permits/construction • New • Remodel/additions • Reassessment
What is the Assessment ratio? • Ratio difference between your municipality’s Total assessed value/Total estimated fair market value (Equalized Value) • This changes as assessment roll becomes outdated! • Assessment roll becomes outdated when assessor isn’t reviewing • historic sales • Reviewing x% properties annually • New construction or remodels
How does the average assessment ratio impact tax payers? • The assessment roll is continually losing accuracy • Market changes • Supply/demand changes • Interest rate changes • New construction • Property removal • Annexations of municipality • Etc. • Without an accurate assessment roll, there becomes room for error between your assessment and the fair market value • If some people are paying less, other people are paying more! • Without equity, your assessment process loses credibility • Common misconception: • lower assmt. ratio saves municipality/person taxes
Total Tax Levy Total Municipal Assessed Value Your property tax is determined by… • Property Total Assessed Value x Municipal Mill Rate • Municipal Mill Rate = • Indiv. Prop. Assessed Value x Total Tax Levy Total Municipal Assessed Value
Net Assessed Value Rate • The combined mill rates of all taxing jurisdictions • So what is a mill rate? • Mill (milli) = 1/1000th • When we say mill rate, we will communicate it as the rate paid per $1,000 value • 0.02146 mill rate = $21.46/$1,000 value • A $100,000 house would pay $2,146.91 net property tax (before any credits)
Taxing Jurisdictions • State of Wisconsin • Technical College • County • School District • Local municipality • Other potential “Special Improvement Districts” • Lake Districts • Sanitary Districts • Water Districts • Business Improvement District
Apportionment • Apportioning the amount each municipality pays of the County Levy • Equalized Value (not assessed value) used for each municipality • Why? • What would happen if they used the assessed value? • Municipality taxpayers with a low assessment ratio would get a break on County taxes, School District taxes, Technical College taxes, WDNR taxes, Etc. • Without Equalization, there would exist a moral hazard for municipality to keep your assessment ratio low
Questions • Karl Green • La Crosse County UW Extension • Karl.green@ces.uwex.edu • 608-785-9763