ChesusRice
Well-Known Member
I get a letter every year explaining that no matter what my appraised value is my tax bill will not fall because of it.I'm curious; you're talking about rental investments, correct?
What does your mortgage agreement have to do with your landlord/renter agreement? Do you have some clause written into your lease agreement with your renter that adjusts the rate relative to the market value of the investment property? If that's the case, why would you do that? I can't imagine the lending institution building that clause in. Has it something to do with landlord tenant laws? I would be so lucky to have any of my properties have a drop in property taxes. But unfortunately the local communities want their pound of flesh regardless of property value; they just rolled levies ...
I know I'm missing something, just curious.
They adjust the mill rate every year to reflect their budgetary needs.
So even if your property lost 50% on the city appraisal. Your tax bill will remain the same.
What a crock of shit