Quote from @John Clark:
Quote from @Courtney Timms:
I have an interesting property tax situation because of my house hacking situation. I bought a duplex in Texas in 2020. I live in side A so I filed for homestead. The county put a homestead on half of my property, but this also re-categorized my property to State Code: A1 instead of B2 for 2021. Category A is a single family residence while Category B is multifamily. They are appraising my duplex as two separate single family dwellings.
The reason this is a concern is because now I cannot use my neighbors as comparable properties as they are listed as B2 properties. These properties which are almost identical to my property are valued at $100k or more less than my property. The only difference is that the owner is not living in one side of those properties like me. A homestead usually helps with lowering taxable value, but it's kind of screwing me over in this situation. Is it possible it remove a homestead exemption and is it a good idea in the long run?
What do they say when you tell them that it’s a duplex and not separate buildings?
They told me the same thing that I found in 2022 Texas Property Tax
Assistance Property Classification Guide. I could not find the the 2023
Guide.
Category B Classification Questions
Q. The owner of a duplex lives in one of the units. He
applies for and receives a homestead exemption
on the part of the duplex in which he resides. How
should I classify the duplex?
A. You should classify an owner-occupied duplex with a
residence homestead exemption as Category A.
Note: If the owner occupies one of the units in a triplex or
a fourplex, classify the property as Category B. Owneroccupancy
does not change the classification for triplexes
and fourplexes.