For Immediate Release
Homestead Exemptions Reduce Property Tax Bills
Homeowners can reduce their property tax bills in
2010 by taking advantage of homestead exemptions offered by counties, cities, school
districts and other local taxing units. To apply for an exemption on your
residence homestead, contact the Brazoria County Appraisal District.
A homestead is generally the house and land used as
the owner’s principal residence on Jan 1 of the tax year. Homestead exemptions reduce the appraised
value of your home and thus lower your property taxes.
Available homestead exemptions include:
- School taxes:
All homeowners may receive a $15,000 homestead exemption for school taxes.
- County taxes:
If a county collects a special tax for farm-to-market roads or flood
control, a homeowner may receive a $3,000 homestead exemption for this
tax.
- Age and
disability exemptions: Individuals 65 or older or disabled may
qualify for a $10,000 homestead exemption for school taxes, in addition to
the $15,000 exemption available to all homeowners. Also, any taxing unit
may offer a local optional exemption of at least $3,000 for taxpayers age 65 or older and/or disabled. Older or
disabled homeowners do not need to own their homes on Jan. 1 to qualify
for these special homestead exemptions. They qualify as soon as they turn
65 or become disabled.
- Taxing units may offer a
local option exemption based on a percentage of a home's
appraised value. In 2010, any taxing unit can exempt up to 20 percent of
the value of each qualified homestead. No matter what percentage of value
the taxing unit adopts, the dollar value of the exemption must be at least
$5,000.
- Partial disabled
veteran exemptions: The law provides partial exemptions for any
property owned by veterans who are disabled, spouses and survivors of
deceased disabled veterans and spouses and survivors of military personnel
who died on active duty. The amount of exemption is determined according
to the percentage of service-connected disability.
- 100% Residence
Homestead Exemption for Disabled Veterans: A disabled veteran who
receives from the United States Department of Veterans Affairs 100 percent
disability compensation due to a service-connected disability and a rating
of 100 percent disabled or of individual unemployability
is entitled to an exemption from taxation of the total appraised value of
the veteran's residence homestead. This benefit does not accrue to the
surviving spouse upon the veteran's death.
Homeowners may also qualify for a limit on taxes. A
tax freeze, or ceiling, for school taxes is a benefit for homeowners when they
turn 65 or become disabled. The elderly or disabled homeowner’s school property
taxes cannot increase above the amount of tax paid on that home in the first
year the homeowner receives the 65 and older homestead exemption, unless the
homeowner improves or adds to the house or makes an improvement because of a
disaster.
In addition to the school tax freeze, counties,
cities and junior college districts may also opt to offer a tax freeze for the
elderly or disabled homeowners. Each taxing unit’s governing body may vote to
grant the freeze, or the citizens of a taxing unit may petition for an election
on granting the freeze.
For further details on homestead
exemptions that can lower your property taxes, contact the Brazoria County
Appraisal District at 500 North Chenango Angleton, Texas 77515 or by calling
(979) 849-7792. Or contact
the Comptroller’s Property Tax Assistance Division at (800) 252-9121, ext. 1,
or visit the Comptroller’s Web site at www.window.state.tx.us/taxinfo/proptax/.