John Simpson, MAI has authored 4 books with the Appraisal Institute and 12 Appraisal Journal articles, but that’s just a part of his monologue. He helps run an appraisal firm, and has been an active day-to-day commercial appraisal for almost 2 decades.
John Simpson, MAI has done an excellent job of identifying many of the key rules of successfully appealing property in his recent 7-part series - Simpson's Keys to Successful Tax Appeals - on his Appraisal Matters blog.
As a commercial appraiser for a township assessment office in Illinois, I can attest to the validity of his remarks! Although his series of articles focus on commercial property appeals . . .the same rules will apply to residential income properties and even single-family homes.
Here's a brief summary of his series:
Keys to Successful Tax Appeals - Part 1 - With the current well-publicized real estate problems, tax appeals have become more viable for commercial property owners. The bottom line is a lower property value, yet real estate tax assessments have not been reduced accordingly.
Keys to Successful Tax Appeals - Part 2 - Key 1 – Know the Rules Before You Play - Although this may seem cliché, not knowing the jurisdiction’s tax assessment and appeals rules can derail a tax appeal well before it even has a chance to be heard.
Keys to Successful Tax Appeals - Part 3 - Key 2 - Avoid “Protective” Appeals - In the last few years, it has become more common for clients to file protective tax appeals on all owned properties. This is a practice that can severely backfire
Keys to Successful Tax Appeals - Part 4 - Key 3 – Know Your Market and Submarkets - Although you may not be an expert, you can call upon experts to learn about your market. Brokers have their fingers on the pulse of the market and they are often more than happy to provide you with truly comparable properties for comparison . .
Keys to Successful Tax Appeals - Part 5 - Key 4 – Always get the Assessor’s worksheet - The Assessor’s worksheet is a document that shows how the Assessor arrived at the market value a property. Many times, the addresses of the comparable sales are included and sometimes operating expense comparables and capitalization rate comparables are shown.
Keys to Successful Tax Appeals - Part 6 - Key 5 – Know the Opposition - Some jurisdictions use Assessors at the state level, some at the county level, some at the local level, and others hire independent appraisers to defend property values. Your strategy will vary among these four types of Assessors
Keys to Successful Tax Appeals - Part 7 -. Key 6 – Use the Right Tool for the Right Job - Based on the type of opposition you will face above, you need to make sure you have the right professionals on your team. Although property owners can appear in front of local boards, almost all commercial tax appeals have attorneys or tax appeal consultants represent the owners. Corporations are required to be represented by an attorney in court. Their time is expensive, so use them wisely.
Click the Appraisal Matters links below for the full articles:
According to a report from the Urban Land Institute "Global Demographics 2008: Shaping Real Estate's Future," three key trends will shape the real estate industry in the future:
Implications for real estate include growth in the retirement housing market, medical facilities, affordable senior housing and senior housing options. Also, there will be an "increased investment in urban infrastructure and increased need for both housing and retail services for a growing urban workforce."
“Both the U.S. and Illinois economies appear to be flirting with recession,” says economist Geoffrey Hewings, director of the University of Illinois Regional Economics Applications Laboratory (REAL) in REAL's May 2008 Report. “With the rapid increases in gasoline prices generating inflationary pressure that may temper any future interest rate adjustment downwards by the Federal Reserve. Over the last twelve months, the Illinois economy has matched the employment growth rate of the U.S. economy for the first time in over a decade.”
Forecasts for the next three months indicate declines in home sales at rates observed since the beginning of the year.
Month-to-month changes suggest that May and June will witness increases in sales but July will experience declines.
Median prices in Illinois and Chicago will move upwards in May and June but will still be below levels recorded in the same months in 2007 (about 6 percent in Illinois and 2-3 percent in Chicago); median prices will fall back in July to levels below those in June but above those in May.
Find more reports and Illinois market data at www.illinoisrealtor.org/MarketCenter.
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