If your Houston or Harris County property value looks too high, you may have the right to challenge it through the HCAD protest process. PropertyTaxes.Law helps homeowners, commercial owners, and high-value property owners in Houston and Harris County prepare stronger evidence, understand Appraisal Review Board hearings, and evaluate next steps when a Harris County property tax protest or appeal requires more than a basic filing.
This page is built for owners looking for Houston and Harris County property tax protest help, HCAD protest guidance, Harris County property tax appeal information, and attorney-supported strategy for properties throughout Houston and Harris County.
The goal is not to replace the official Harris County Appraisal District portal. Instead, this page explains how to prepare for the process, what evidence may help, when an Appraisal Review Board hearing may matter, and when to evaluate Texas property tax appeal options.
Review the notice carefully because errors in valuation, property details, and exemptions can directly affect your tax bill.
Texas property owners can challenge market value, unequal appraisal, incorrect records, exemption issues, and other appraisal problems.
A stronger Harris County protest can improve leverage early and support better next-step options if the result remains unfair.
Acting early gives you more time to review the notice, gather evidence, and prepare a stronger protest before the deadline.
Property owners protest in Harris County because a high appraised value can lead directly to a higher property tax bill. The Harris County Appraisal District handles a large volume of properties, and mass appraisal methods may not fully account for property condition, market changes, comparable sales, income issues, or differences between similar nearby properties.
A Harris County property tax protest may be appropriate when the appraised value appears too high, the property is unequally appraised, exemptions are missing or incorrect, or the appraisal record contains factual errors.
The phrase "HCAD property tax protest" usually refers to the process for challenging the Harris County Appraisal District's value. The process generally begins when the owner receives a notice of appraised value and reviews whether the value is supported by market data, property condition, comparable properties, and correct property characteristics.
For statewide process guidance, review our Texas property tax protest services page and our guide on how to protest property taxes and win in Texas.
Timing is critical in any Harris County property tax protest. In many Texas property tax cases, the filing deadline is generally May 15 or within 30 days after the appraisal district delivers the notice of appraised value, whichever is later. If May 15 falls on a weekend or holiday, the deadline extends to the next business day.
HCAD typically mails appraisal notices in late March or early April. Review the deadline printed on your actual notice — the 30-day clock starts from the mailing date on the notice, and in some years this pushes the effective deadline past May 15.
For broader deadline guidance, review our Texas property tax deadlines guide and our property tax appeal deadlines by county resource.
Protests are filed with the Harris Central Appraisal District (HCAD), which appraises more than 1.5 million properties — one of the largest appraisal districts in the United States. HCAD strongly encourages online filing through its iFile system for the fastest processing and immediate confirmation.
HCAD handles values, exemptions, and protests; the Harris County Tax Assessor-Collector handles tax payments. Procedures, portal details, and deadlines can change — always confirm current information on your notice or at hcad.org before filing.
Evidence is one of the most important parts of a Harris County protest. The strongest evidence depends on the property type, the valuation issue, and how HCAD determined the appraised value.
Before preparing evidence, it helps to understand the difference between market value vs. appraised value in Texas and how unequal appraisal may affect a property tax protest.
If the protest is not resolved informally, the case may proceed to an Appraisal Review Board hearing. At the hearing, the property owner or representative may present evidence supporting a lower value, a correction to property records, or an unequal appraisal argument.
ARB hearings are evidence-driven. A stronger presentation usually explains the problem clearly, supports the requested value, and connects the evidence to the specific issue being protested. For more detail, visit our Appraisal Review Board hearing guide.
Harris County includes Houston and many surrounding communities with residential neighborhoods, luxury homes, commercial corridors, industrial properties, multifamily assets, and business personal property accounts. Protest strategy can vary depending on the city, neighborhood, property type, and valuation issue.
Houston property tax protest strategy may involve market value, unequal appraisal, commercial income evidence, or neighborhood-specific sales.
Properties in the Harris County portion of Katy may involve fast-changing values, new construction, and comparable-sales issues.
Cypress owners should review appraisal increases, local comparable sales, property condition, and unequal appraisal concerns.
Spring-area properties may require careful review of appraisal notices, neighborhood market data, and property-specific conditions.
Residential, commercial, and industrial property owners should review whether the appraisal reflects the property accurately.
Baytown-area property tax protests may involve residential values, commercial property, industrial issues, or property data errors.
Commercial property tax protests can involve more complex evidence than residential protests. Harris County commercial owners may need to review income, expenses, rent rolls, vacancies, tenant issues, comparable sales, market cap rates, deferred maintenance, or unequal appraisal.
Commercial owners should also consider whether the appraisal district used the right valuation method and whether the assumptions reflect the property's actual economics. For more guidance, review our commercial property tax protest guide and commercial property tax services page.
High-value residential properties often require a more careful protest strategy because small valuation differences can create meaningful tax exposure. Owners may need to review custom features, condition issues, neighborhood differences, sales timing, lot characteristics, and whether comparable properties are truly comparable.
Learn more about our work with high-end residential property taxes.
Some Harris County property tax protests are straightforward. Others may involve high values, commercial income evidence, legal issues, unequal appraisal arguments, appeal deadlines, or the possibility of arbitration or litigation.
Attorney-supported guidance can be especially useful when the property is high-value, commercial, industrial, heavily disputed, or when the owner needs to evaluate next steps after an unfavorable ARB result. For more detail, review our dedicated Houston property tax attorney page — including how Brandon Barcus, a dual-licensed Texas attorney and property tax consultant, handles HCAD protests, ARB hearings, and binding arbitration for Houston property owners.
For a broader view of legal strategy after a protest, see advantages of filing a property tax lawsuit in Texas.
After a Harris County protest, the result may reduce the value, leave the value unchanged, or only partially resolve the issue. If the result remains unfair, additional options may need to be evaluated based on the property type, value, deadline, and legal issue.
Possible next steps may include reviewing the ARB order, evaluating settlement posture, considering property tax arbitration in Texas, or assessing whether a lawsuit or judicial appeal is appropriate.
Statewide service page for challenging appraisal district values.
Learn what may happen after the protest or ARB stage.
Review timing issues before a deadline creates risk.
Understand the value terms that often appear in Texas protests.
Review the proposed value, property details, exemptions, and protest deadline.
Determine whether the protest involves market value, unequal appraisal, incorrect data, or another issue.
Collect comparable sales, condition support, income evidence, equity data, or other documentation.
File before the deadline and prepare for informal review or an ARB hearing.
Compare the result with the evidence and decide whether further review is needed.
If the value remains too high, evaluate appeal, arbitration, or lawsuit options where appropriate.
File online at owners.hcad.org using your iFile number (printed in the upper right of your appraisal notice) — this is HCAD's recommended method and provides immediate confirmation. You can also mail Form 50-132 to the address on your notice, or drop it off in person at 13013 Northwest Freeway, Houston, TX 77040 during business hours. After filing, upload your evidence within 5 calendar days. Visit hcad.org for current filing instructions and mailing address.
Start by reviewing your HCAD notice of appraised value, checking the protest deadline, identifying the valuation issue, gathering evidence, and filing a protest before the applicable deadline.
In many Texas cases, the deadline is May 15 or 30 days after the notice is delivered, whichever is later. If May 15 falls on a weekend or holiday, the deadline extends to the next business day. Always confirm the deadline on your actual notice and review our Texas property tax deadlines guide.
Useful evidence may include comparable sales, condition photos, repair estimates, incorrect property data, unequal appraisal comparisons, income records, expense data, rent rolls, and market support.
Yes. Commercial owners may protest based on market value, unequal appraisal, income performance, vacancy, expenses, capitalization rates, condition problems, and comparable sales.
Yes. Houston and Harris County owners may involve a property tax attorney when the case involves high value, commercial property, complex evidence, appeal options, arbitration, or possible litigation. Visit our Houston property tax attorney page for details.
At an ARB hearing, the property owner or representative may present evidence, and the appraisal district may present its support. The board then decides whether the value or appraisal treatment should be changed.
Depending on the facts, deadline, and property type, additional appeal options may be available after the protest or ARB stage. Review our Property Tax Appeal Texas page for more detail.
Attorney-supported help may be useful for high-value residential, commercial, industrial, unequal appraisal, or appeal-sensitive disputes, especially when the result may affect a significant tax amount.
If your Harris County assessment looks too high, PropertyTaxes.Law can help you review the notice, identify the strongest protest grounds, and pursue a more effective protest or appeal strategy.
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