More than a dozen states are in active fights to cut, cap, or outright eliminate property taxes. Texas has school property tax elimination on the 2026 ballot. Florida passed a phase-out through the House. Indiana just pushed through what it’s calling the biggest property tax reform in 50 years. Politicians everywhere are calling it the biggest backlash since California’s Prop 13 in 1978.
Good news if you own a home. But before you assume relief is coming, let’s talk about what’s actually likely to happen and what you can do right now without waiting on any legislature.
Why Property Tax Bills Exploded
Home values have risen roughly 27% faster than inflation since 2020. Tax bills followed. But the way property taxes actually work created a specific kind of pain that the headlines don’t fully explain.
Taxing authorities don’t reassess home values in real time every year. When markets move fast, they fall behind by a year or two. Then, when they finally catch up, they hit homeowners with the full accumulated increase all at once rather than spreading it out gradually. What could have been a manageable annual bump shows up as a 10%, 15%, or higher jump in a single tax year. That’s not an accident. That’s how the system works, and it’s a big part of what’s driving the current revolt.
What’s Realistic and What’s Just a Campaign Promise
Here’s my honest take: full property tax elimination is not happening. It sounds great on the campaign trail and will get votes, but the math doesn’t work. Property taxes fund schools, roads, and local government. States can’t simply conjure another revenue source overnight to replace that.
What I think will actually pass in a meaningful number of states is annual caps on how much property tax assessed values can increase in a single year. That’s the realistic, structural fix. If a taxing authority falls two years behind on reassessments and tries to catch everyone up at once, a cap forces them to spread that increase over multiple years instead. The homeowner still sees the increase, but it doesn’t arrive as a gut punch all at once.
That’s a genuine, practical improvement, even if it’s not the headline-grabbing elimination some politicians are promising.
The Option Most Homeowners Don’t Know They Have
Here’s something that often surprises people: in virtually every state, you have the right to protest your property tax assessment. Each year you should receive an advance notice of your new assessed value, and you typically have a window to challenge it before it becomes final. Most states also collect property taxes in arrears, which gives you additional time to act.
Most homeowners ignore that notice and assume the number is what it is. It’s not.
I learned this firsthand in Texas. My assessed value jumped over 10% in a single year, and at the time Texas didn’t have cap protections in place to prevent that. I hired a property tax protest consultant, someone who specializes in challenging these assessments, and they got my value brought back in line. It saved me a significant amount of money and stopped a bad trend from compounding year after year.
Property tax protest consultants often work on contingency, meaning they take a percentage of what they save you with no upfront cost. If you’ve never looked into this, it’s worth a conversation before your next assessment notice arrives.
What This Means If You’re Buying Right Now
If you’re shopping for a home, the property tax revolt should tell you one thing clearly: taxes are not fixed. They move, they can move significantly, and they vary dramatically from state to state and sometimes county to county within the same state.
A generic mortgage calculator that plugs in a flat 1% or 1.2% tax rate is not giving you an accurate picture of your carrying costs. It’s giving you a placeholder that could be off by hundreds of dollars a month depending on where you’re buying.
The Total Mortgage Payment and Cash to Close Calculator at YourMortgageToolbox.com uses real state-level property tax and insurance averages, not generic placeholders. That matters when tax rates are in flux and vary as widely as they do right now. Pair it with the Pre-Qualification Calculator to understand what you actually qualify for with realistic tax figures baked in, not a number a politician is promising might change someday.
Read Your Statement. Know Your Rights.
You don’t need to wait for your state legislature to act. Read your annual property tax assessment when it arrives. Know what your state’s protest window is. If your assessed value jumped significantly and doesn’t reflect what comparable homes in your area are actually selling for, challenge it.
And if you’re buying in a state actively debating reform like Texas, Florida, or Indiana, don’t budget based on what taxes might become. Underwrite to what they are today. If reform passes, that’s upside. If it doesn’t, you’re not caught short.
Use the Total Mortgage Payment Calculator to see your real carrying costs based on today’s actual numbers, then make your decision from there.