HCAD says your Houston home is worth $487,000. Your neighbors paid less.
Filing Deadline
May 15, 2026 (43 days left)
According to Harris County Appraisal District certified property rolls (Texas Tax Code §25.19), every residential property must be appraised at 100% of market value each year. The appraisal district determines your home’s appraised value using recent comparable sales, property characteristics, and neighborhood trends — which directly sets your tax bill. If the district overestimates your home’s worth, you overpay, and that compounds over time.
However, Texas homeowners with a homestead exemption benefit from a 10% annual cap on assessed value increases. This means your assessed value cannot rise more than 10% over the prior year’s assessed value, regardless of how much the market value increases. As a result, the appraised value (what the district says your home is worth) and the assessed value (the capped figure used for taxation) can diverge significantly in rapidly appreciating markets.
Under Texas Tax Code §41.43(b)(3), homeowners can challenge their appraisal on two distinct grounds. The first is market value — arguing that the appraised value exceeds what your home would actually sell for. The second is unequal appraisal — demonstrating that your property is assessed higher than comparable homes in your neighborhood. Furthermore, you can present both arguments simultaneously, which strengthens your overall case at the informal hearing with HCAD.
Median Home Value
$301,700
Est. Overassessment (14%)
$42,238
Annual Excess Tax
$617
3-Year Cost
$1,851
Based on the county median home value and 1.46% effective tax rate. Source: HCAD certified rolls and Texas Comptroller Property Tax Division.
See how your appraisal compares to similar homes using real HCAD data. 30 seconds. No signup.
Check My Property FreeAccording to the Texas Comptroller’s Biennial Property Tax Operations Survey, these are the latest protest outcomes for your appraisal district.
Properties Analyzed
1,142,705
Protests Filed
516,654
Informal Win Rate
88.6%
Median Reduction
$21,416
Over 400,000 Harris County homeowners protested last year. 88% won a reduction.
Additionally, the protest process in Texas is straightforward and designed for homeowners to represent themselves. Here is the step-by-step process for filing through HCAD.
Enter your address on our site to compare your assessed value against neighboring properties. Our analysis identifies whether your home is overvalued relative to comparable sales in your area, which forms the foundation of a strong protest.
Our $49 evidence packet includes comparable property sales within your neighborhood, a detailed assessment analysis, and filing instructions tailored to your local appraisal district. In contrast to generic online tools, our packet identifies the specific comparable properties most likely to support a reduction. One-time fee — no recurring charges, no contingency. You keep 100% of your savings.
Submit your notice of protest through iFile before the May 15 deadline. You can also file by mail or in person at the appraisal office. Online filing is the fastest and provides immediate confirmation.
The appraisal district will schedule an informal hearing where you meet one-on-one with an appraiser. Bring your evidence packet — according to the Texas Comptroller’s Biennial Operations Survey, the majority of protests are resolved at this informal stage without ever reaching the Appraisal Review Board (ARB).
“The informal hearing is where most Texas homeowners win their reduction. Coming prepared with comparable properties from your own neighborhood is the single most effective strategy.” — Texas Property Tax Appeal
Not all approaches to protesting your property tax assessment are equal. The table below compares the three most common options available to homeowners.
| Approach | Cost | Your Effort | You Keep |
|---|---|---|---|
| Do Nothing | $0 | None | Overpay every year |
| Hire a Consultant (O’Connor, Ownwell) | 25–50% of savings/year | Minimal | 50–75% of savings |
| DIY with Our Evidence Packet | $79 one-time | ~2 hours | 100% of savings |
In other words, a consultant’s ongoing percentage fee can exceed the cost of our one-time evidence packet within the first year — and you retain every dollar of your reduction going forward.
Below are the most common questions homeowners ask about the property tax protest process in the county.
The protest deadline is May 15. You must file your protest with HCAD by this date or within 30 days of receiving your notice of appraised value (NOAV), whichever is later. Under Texas Tax Code §41.44, late filings are generally not accepted unless you can demonstrate good cause.
You can file online through iFile, by mail, or in person at the Harris County Appraisal District office. Online filing is the fastest option and provides immediate confirmation. Specifically, you will need to submit a completed Notice of Protest (Form 50-132) identifying the property and your grounds for protest.
The strongest evidence includes comparable property sales from your neighborhood, photographs documenting any condition issues, and an analysis demonstrating that your assessed value exceeds fair market value. For an unequal appraisal argument, you will also need assessment ratios of comparable properties. Our evidence packet provides all of these elements for $79.
Yes. 88.6% of Harris County informal protests resulted in a reduction in 2024. With our $49 evidence packet, many homeowners save hundreds or thousands per year.
No. Filing a protest cannot cause your taxes to increase. Your appraised value can only stay the same or be reduced as a result of the protest process. There is no financial risk to filing.
If you do not reach a satisfactory resolution at the informal hearing, you can proceed to a formal hearing before the Appraisal Review Board (ARB). The ARB is a panel of appointed citizens who will review your evidence independently. Beyond the ARB, homeowners also have the right to pursue binding arbitration or file in district court, though most cases are resolved before reaching that stage.
Explore property tax data by city within Harris County.
Houston
670,868 properties · 3155 neighborhoods
Spring
75,874 properties · 475 neighborhoods
Katy
75,752 properties · 273 neighborhoods
Cypress
67,793 properties · 368 neighborhoods
Humble
58,312 properties · 240 neighborhoods
Tomball
34,039 properties · 263 neighborhoods
Pasadena
30,646 properties · 129 neighborhoods
Baytown
24,895 properties · 146 neighborhoods
Meanwhile, we also publish free guides and data-driven analysis to help you navigate the protest process independently.
Read the full Harris County protest guide (2026) →
How to file through HCAD with local data and hearing tips.
Texas property tax protest guide (2026)
Step-by-step walkthrough with deadlines and evidence tips.
What to say at your hearing
Three ready-to-use scripts for common scenarios.
2026 protest deadlines by county
County-by-county filing calendar and late filing rules.
DIY vs. hiring a consultant
Cost comparison with real data on when each option makes sense.
Enter your address to see how your appraisal compares to neighboring properties. Free. No signup required.
$49 one-time fee · No recurring charges · You keep 100% of your savings
Check My Assessment Free