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- Is My Property Over-Assessed?
WARNING SIGNS
5 Signs Your Property May Be Over-Assessed
Your vacancy rate is higher than the market average, but your assessment assumes full or near-full occupancy
Your net operating income has been declining, yet your assessed value keeps climbing
Recent comparable sales in your area closed below your property's assessed value
You haven't made improvements, but your taxes rose significantly anyway
Your assessment increased at a rate that outpaces actual market appreciation
HOW IT HAPPENS
Why Assessments Get It Wrong
County assessors are responsible for valuing thousands of properties every year. To manage this workload, they use mass appraisal models — statistical methods that apply broad assumptions to large groups of properties at once.
The problem is that your property isn't a statistic. Mass appraisal can't account for your specific vacancy rate, your actual lease terms, deferred maintenance, or local market conditions that affect your property differently than the one down the street.
Assessors also work with outdated data. By the time your assessment notice arrives, the market data behind it may be one to three years old. If your property's income dropped, a major tenant left, or the local market softened, the assessor likely doesn't know about it. Learn more about how commercial properties are assessed and where errors typically occur.

YOUR NEXT MOVE
What to Do If You Think You're Over-Assessed
01
Check Your Assessment
02
Gather Your Evidence
03
File an Appeal — or Get Expert Help
WHY EPTA
You Don't Have to Figure This Out Alone

FIND OUT NOW
Get a Free Assessment Review
If any of those warning signs hit home, don't wait. Send us your property details and we'll analyze your assessment at no cost. If there's an opportunity to reduce your taxes, we'll show you exactly how much you could save.
No upfront fees. No obligation. Just answers.
