Appeal by state & county
Every state plays by
its own rules.
Texans protest. Long Islanders grieve. Californians file assessment appeals, and New Englanders ask for abatements. The paperwork differs everywhere; the case underneath never does — show what your home was actually worth on the assessment date. Pick your state for deadlines, review boards, and the local playbook.
California
- Los Angeles County
- San Diego County
- Orange County
- Riverside County
- San Bernardino County
- Santa Clara County
- Alameda County
- Sacramento County
- Contra Costa County
- San Mateo County
- San Francisco
- Fresno County
- Kern County
- Ventura County
- San Joaquin County
- Stanislaus County
- Sonoma County
- Tulare County
- Santa Barbara County
- Solano County
- Monterey County
- Placer County
- Marin County
Florida
- Miami-Dade County
- Broward County
- Palm Beach County
- Hillsborough County
- Orange County
- Duval County
- Pinellas County
- Lee County
- Sarasota County
- Manatee County
- Charlotte County
- Collier County
- Polk County
- Brevard County
- Volusia County
- Pasco County
- Seminole County
- Osceola County
- Lake County
- Marion County
- St. Lucie County
- Escambia County
- Leon County
- St. Johns County
- Alachua County
Texas
- Harris County
- Dallas County
- Tarrant County
- Bexar County
- Travis County
- Collin County
- Denton County
- Fort Bend County
- Williamson County
- Montgomery County
- El Paso County
- Hidalgo County
- Bell County
- Cameron County
- Brazoria County
- Galveston County
- Nueces County
- Lubbock County
- Hays County
- Webb County
- McLennan County
- Jefferson County
- Smith County
- Brazos County
- Ellis County
- Johnson County
- Comal County
- Guadalupe County
- Kaufman County
- Rockwall County
- Parker County
Licensed. Defensible. USPAP.
Every report is signed by a state-licensed appraiser
We’re not an AVM, a computer model, or a real-estate agent estimate. Every report is prepared under the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) and signed by a licensed appraiser in your state — the same qualification required for mortgage appraisals.