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by kspacewalk2
685 days ago
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Okay, maybe I'm making unwarranted assumptions that assessments are done the same everywhere, and property taxes are decided on the same way everywhere. Here's how it's done in Ontario where I live: 1. Assessed value ≠ market value. Assessed value is determined by some criteria such that sqft, #rooms, desirability of neighbourhood, pools, etc correlate with the final value. 2. Actual value doesn't matter at all. If everyone's assessed values go up 10% in the municipality, property tax bills change by $0. What matters is the relative assessed values. They determine how much of a city's tax bill the household pays. 3. The actual process for determining the tax bill: city comes up with a total figure to be collected. City sums all assessed values of all properties. Divide former by latter to get a multiplier (e.g. 1.355%). That multiplier times assessed value is your property tax. (It's a bit more complicated because they collect slightly different amounts from different property types). Is it different in California? |
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This means that two side by side buildings can have assessed values differing by orders of magnitude. This has all the inequitable downstream consequences you would expect.