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PROPERTY TAX APPEAL GUIDE

DIY vs Professional Property Tax Appeal

Thinking about handling your property tax appeal yourself? Sometimes that makes sense. But for many property owners, the hidden costs of going it alone far outweigh the savings of hiring an expert on contingency.

WHEN DIY WORKS

When a DIY Property Tax Appeal Makes Sense

Not every property tax appeal requires professional help. If your situation is straightforward, handling the appeal yourself can be a reasonable option — especially for residential properties with clear comparable sales data.

Your property is a single-family home or small residential property

You have clear comparable sales that sold below your assessed value

The assessment increase is modest and your tax bill is relatively small

You're comfortable gathering evidence and presenting at a hearing

Your local Board of Review process is informal and owner-friendly

THE HIDDEN COSTS OF DIY

5 Risks of Handling Your Property Tax Appeal Alone

Going the DIY route is technically free — but mistakes can cost you far more than a professional's contingency fee. Here are the risks most property owners don't see coming.

Missing Critical Deadlines

Appeal deadlines are strict and vary by state — May 31 in Michigan, March 31 in Ohio, 45 days from notice in Indiana. Miss the window and you're locked into your assessment for the entire year.

Weak or Inadmissible Evidence

Tribunals require specific types of evidence — not just a feeling that your taxes are too high. Without proper comparable sales analysis, income documentation, or cost approach data, your case gets dismissed.

Wrong Valuation Methodology

Commercial properties are typically valued using the income approach, not just comparable sales. Most DIY appellants don't know which methodology applies or how to present it correctly.

Underestimating the Reduction

DIY appellants frequently accept the first offer from the assessor's office — often a modest 5-10% reduction — when a professional could have negotiated 20-40% based on stronger evidence.

The Compounding Cost of Settling

Every dollar of over-assessment you accept this year becomes the baseline for future years. A $50,000 over-assessment costs you thousands annually — compounding for as long as you own the property.

WHAT PROFESSIONALS BRING

Why Professionally-Represented Appeals Win More Often

Property tax professionals don't just file paperwork. They bring specialized knowledge and experience that directly translates into larger reductions and higher success rates.

01

Appraisal & Valuation Expertise

Professionals understand all three approaches to value — sales comparison, income capitalization, and cost — and know which one produces the strongest argument for your property type.

02

Tribunal & Hearing Experience

They've presented hundreds of cases before boards of review and tax tribunals. They know what evidence is persuasive, what procedural rules apply, and how to handle assessor objections.

03

Negotiation Leverage

Assessors take professionally-represented cases more seriously. A well-prepared case with credible evidence often leads to pre-hearing settlements at significantly higher reductions than DIY appellants achieve.

04

Market Data & Analytics

Professional firms maintain databases of comparable sales, cap rates, and assessment trends that individual property owners simply don't have access to — giving them a factual edge in every case.

THE REAL COMPARISON

DIY vs Professional — What Actually Happens

The choice isn't just about cost. It's about the outcome. Here's what typically happens with each approach.

Hire a Professional (Contingency)

Expert reviews your assessment and builds the strongest possible case

All deadlines tracked and filings handled on time

Evidence prepared using the right valuation methodology

Negotiation with assessor often leads to pre-hearing settlement

Higher average reductions — typically 20-40% of over-assessment

No fee unless your taxes are actually reduced

Handle It Yourself (DIY)

Hours researching comparable sales and tribunal procedures

Risk of missing filing deadlines or procedural requirements

Limited access to market data and valuation tools

Assessors less likely to offer significant pre-hearing reductions

Lower average reductions — often settling for the first offer

Time spent is never recovered, even if the appeal succeeds

ZERO FINANCIAL RISK

EPTA's Contingency Model: You Pay Nothing Unless We Save You Money

The most common reason property owners try the DIY route is cost. But with EPTA's contingency-based model, that concern disappears. You pay nothing upfront, nothing hourly, and nothing at all if we don't reduce your taxes.

Our fee is a percentage of the actual savings we achieve — so our incentive is to maximize your reduction, not just close the case. This means you get professional-level representation with zero financial risk.

For most commercial property owners, the savings a professional achieves — even after the contingency fee — far exceed what a DIY appeal would have produced. Learn more about what to look for in a property tax consultant and how appeal costs actually work.

No upfront fees, retainers, or hourly charges

Fee is a percentage of actual tax savings — typically 25-40%

If we don't reduce your taxes, you owe nothing

Our incentive is aligned with yours: maximum reduction

Property tax professional meeting with commercial property owner
Yes — property owners have the legal right to appeal their own assessments. For straightforward residential properties with a clear comparable sales argument, a DIY appeal can work. But success rates drop significantly for commercial properties or cases that require income analysis, and procedural mistakes can disqualify your appeal entirely. See our appeal process guide for the full steps involved.
Most reputable firms work on contingency, meaning you pay nothing unless they reduce your taxes. The typical fee is 25% to 40% of the first year's savings. There are no upfront costs, retainers, or hourly charges. For a detailed breakdown, visit our property tax appeal cost guide.
The most common mistake is relying on a single argument — usually "my taxes are too high" — without supporting it with the right valuation methodology. Assessors and tribunals expect evidence grounded in comparable sales, income analysis, or cost approaches. Without that framework, even a valid claim gets dismissed.
It depends on the gap between your assessed value and actual market value. Even modest reductions compound over time because your corrected assessment becomes the baseline for future years. For residential properties with small bills, a DIY appeal may be sufficient. For commercial properties, the savings from professional representation almost always exceed the contingency fee.
If you lose a DIY appeal, you continue paying the same taxes — there's no penalty for trying. However, you've lost the opportunity for that tax year and can't re-file. If you hire a professional on contingency, you owe nothing if the appeal is unsuccessful. The key risk of losing isn't a penalty — it's the missed savings you could have captured with a stronger case.
If your property is commercial, has a tax bill over $25,000, involves complex income or expense factors, or if you suspect your assessed value is significantly above market value, professional help will almost certainly pay for itself. EPTA offers a free assessment review to help you find out — no obligation.

NOT SURE WHICH ROUTE IS RIGHT?

Find Out If Professional Help Makes Sense for Your Property

Request a free assessment review. We'll analyze your property, tell you if an appeal is worth pursuing, and show you what a professional can achieve — no cost, no obligation.

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