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Fredericksburg Reassessments

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

28% of City Property Owners May Get Higher Tax Bills

After a review of the appraisal process, City Council voted to move forward with advertising an equalized real estate tax rate of 74 cents per $100 of assessed value.

About 30 percent of Fredericksburg's property owners will pay a tax increase this year if City Council approves the advertised real estate tax rate of 74 cents per $100 of assessed value. The rest will pay the same or less, depending on their final reassessment. City staff presentedPearson Appraisals Fred Pearson's appraisal details to City Council in a work session Tuesday night. The overall tax book value of property in the city was $3.6 billion in 2011 and the new preliminary value is $3.58 billion. According to Pearson's presentation, multi-family homes saw the largest increase at 24.3 percent. Single-family homes dropped 6.53 percent and commercial and industrial property dropped 2.03 percent, which came as a shock to the local …

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

You Got Your Reassessment, What Do You Think?

Reassessment notices were mailed out Monday and city residents and property owners will have them this week. Share your comments and concerns here/

Fredericksburg's reassessment notices have been mailed and Fredericksburg Patch is seeking out your comments and concerns. Do you agree with your reassessment? Which neighborhood do you live in and let's review the comparable real estate together. Overall commercial and industrial property is down about 1.5 percent and all residential is down 7.5 percent, according to city officials. The city was anticipating property value decreases in the 12-percent range. Fred Pearson, the property assessor, said he used 2011 and some 2012 sales to compare. Overall decline is about 1.71 percent. Commercial propery Realtors have already complained about the small decrease, when they were expecting double-digit drops. Is your home reassessment out of …

Marcie Floyd Tanner

8:08 am on Friday, April 6, 2012

We went from $307,000 to $260,000. Seems rather high.   more ›

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