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CAP RATES & PROPERTY TAXES

How Cap Rates Affect Property Tax Assessments

Cap rates are one of the most important — and most misused — factors in commercial property tax assessments. Understanding how they work can be the key to a successful appeal.

CAP RATE BASICS

What Is a Cap Rate and Why Does It Matter for Taxes?

A capitalization rate (cap rate) converts a property's net operating income (NOI) into an estimated market value. When assessors use the income approach, the cap rate they choose directly determines your assessed value — a lower cap rate means a higher assessment, and vice versa. Many assessors use cap rates that are too low, inflating your property's assessed value and driving up your tax bill.

01Cap rate = NOI ÷ Property Value
02Lower cap rates produce higher assessed values
03Assessors often use outdated or market-wide cap rates
04Property-specific risk factors are frequently ignored
05A small cap rate error can mean tens of thousands in extra taxes

THE PROBLEM

How Assessors Get Cap Rates Wrong

Assessors often use published cap rate surveys or regional averages that don't reflect your specific property's risk profile. They may ignore factors like vacancy, deferred maintenance, lease rollover risk, and local market conditions. The result: an artificially low cap rate that inflates your assessment far above what investors would actually pay.
Commercial property owner frustrated by inflated cap rate tax assessment

OUR APPROACH

How EPTA Uses Cap Rate Analysis in Your Appeal

Market-Specific Cap Rate Research

We identify actual cap rates from recent comparable sales in your market — not generic surveys or statewide averages.

Property Risk Adjustment

We adjust for your property's specific risk factors: vacancy, tenant quality, lease terms, deferred maintenance, and location.

Income & Expense Verification

We verify the NOI figure the assessor used. Overstated income or understated expenses both inflate your assessment.

Expert Testimony Support

When needed, we support cap rate arguments with market data and expert analysis that holds up before tribunals and boards of revision.

THE INCOME APPROACH

How the Income Approach Values Your Property

01

Estimate Market Rent

The assessor estimates what your property could earn at market rental rates — often using broad averages rather than actual lease data.

02

Calculate NOI

Operating expenses are subtracted from gross income to arrive at net operating income. Assessors frequently underestimate expenses.

03

Select a Cap Rate

The assessor applies a capitalization rate to convert NOI into a property value. This is where the biggest errors happen.

04

Determine Assessed Value

The resulting value becomes your assessed value — and the basis for your tax bill. If any input is wrong, your taxes are too high.
A capitalization rate (cap rate) is the ratio used to convert a property's net operating income into an estimated market value. In property tax assessments, assessors apply a cap rate to your NOI to determine what your property is worth under the income approach. The cap rate they choose has a direct and significant impact on your assessed value.
A lower cap rate produces a higher property value — and higher taxes. Because the formula divides NOI by the cap rate, even a small decrease in the rate can add hundreds of thousands of dollars to your assessed value. If your assessor is using a cap rate that's too low, you may be significantly overpaying. Request a free assessment review to find out.
Yes. The cap rate is one of the most commonly challenged inputs in income-based property tax assessments. You can present evidence of market-derived cap rates from comparable sales, investor surveys, and property-specific risk factors to argue for a higher (and more accurate) cap rate. Learn more about the appeal process.
The right cap rate depends on your property's specific risk profile — including its location, condition, tenant quality, lease terms, and vacancy history. Generic survey rates or regional averages often understate risk and produce inflated values. A proper analysis requires looking at actual comparable sales and adjusting for your property's characteristics. See our guide on what evidence you need for an appeal.
Absolutely. Income approach disputes — including cap rate challenges — are a core part of what we do. We analyze your property's income, expenses, and the cap rate used by the assessor, then build a case using market data that supports a more accurate valuation. There's no fee unless we reduce your taxes. Get a free review to get started.
Tax consultant reviewing cap rate errors in property tax assessment

Think Your Assessment Uses the Wrong Cap Rate?

We'll review your assessment and identify cap rate errors — for free.

No fee unless we save you money.