FAQs:
Uniform Percentage of Value
The percentage of
market value (full value) used by an assessing unit to establish
uniform assessments. This value must appear on the tentative
roll. Real Property Tax Law Section 305 specifies, "all
real property in each assessing unit shall be assessed at a
uniform percentage of value..."
Taxable Status
Date
The ownership and physical condition of real
property as of this date are assessed (valued) according to
price fixed as of the valuation date. All applications for
property exemptions must be filed with the assessor by this
date.
Residential Assessment Ratio (RAR)
A
percentage established by the State Board of Real Property
Services according to law, using the ratio of assessed value to
the sales price for each usable residential sale in a recent
one-year period. Ratios are then listed from highest to lowest;
the midpoint (median) ratio is selected as the RAR. The RAR can
be used to prove that a residential property is assessed at a
higher level than other homes on the assessment roll. Your
locality's RAR indicates at what percent of full value
residential properties are assessed. For example, a RAR of 20
indicates that residential properties are assessed at
approximately 20 percent of their full value.
Equalization Rate
"State equalization
rate" means the percentage of full value at which taxable
real property in a county, city, town or village is assessed as
determined by the state board." (RPTL Section 102) The rate
is a ratio of the sum of the locally determined assessed values
for all taxable parcels for a given assessment roll divided by
ORPS's estimate of total full value for that same roll.
Who is the Assessor?
The assessor is a local
government official who estimates the value of real property
within a city, town, or village's boundaries. This value is
converted into an assessment, which is one component in the
computation of real property tax bills.
What Training
Does the Assessor Have To Take?
Assessors must obtain
basic certification by New York State within three years of
taking office*. This requires the successful completion of
orientation, three assessment administration course components,
and five appraisal components, including farm appraisal for
certain agricultural communities. The New York State Office of
Real Property Services (ORPS) prescribes the components.
*Assessors in Nassau County, New York City, Albany, Buffalo,
Rochester, Syracuse, and Yonkers are not required to obtain
basic certification.
Each year, appointed assessors must
complete an average of 24 hours of continuing education. Both
elected and appointed assessors may attain any of three advanced
designations awarded by ORPS: State Certified Assessor-Advanced,
State Certified Assessor-Professional, and State Certified
Assessor-National.
What Does an Assessor Do?
The assessor is obligated by New York State law to maintain
assessments at a uniform percentage of market value each year.
The assessor signs an oath to this effect when certifying the
tentative assessment roll -- the document containing each
property assessment. The physical description (or inventory) and
value estimate of every parcel is required to be kept current.
In order to maintain a uniform roll, each year your assessor
will need to analyze all of the properties in the municipality
to determine which assessments need to be changed.
Where
assessments need to be changed, in some cases, your assessor
will be able to increase or decrease the assessments of a
neighborhood or group of properties by applying real estate
market trends to those properties. This is possible only when
the assessments to be changed are at a uniform level other than
the municipality's stated level of assessment. In other cases,
the assessor will need to conduct physical reinspections for
reappraisals of properties. Every assessing unit should be
keeping all assessments at a fair and uniform level every
year.
The assessment roll shows assessments and
appropriate exemptions. Every year the roll, with preliminary or
tentative assessments, is made available for public inspection.
After the Board of Assessment Review (BAR) has acted on
assessment complaints and ordered any changes, the tentative
assessment roll is made final.
What Kind of Property
is Assessed?
All real property, commonly known as
real estate, is assessed. Real property is defined as land and
any permanent structures attached to it. Some examples of real
property are houses, gas stations, office buildings, vacant
land, motels, shopping centers, saleable natural resources (oil,
gas, timber), farms, apartment buildings, factories,
restaurants, and, in most instances, mobile homes.
How
is Real Property Assessed?
Before assessing any
parcel of property, the assessor estimates its market value.
Market value is how much a property would sell for, in an open
market, under normal conditions. To estimate market values, the
assessor must be familiar with all aspects of the local real
estate market.
A property's value can be estimated in
three different ways. First, property is compared to others
similar to it that have sold recently, using only sales where
the buyer and seller both acted without undue pressure. This
method is called the market approach and is normally used to
value residential, vacant, and farm properties.
The
second way is to calculate the cost, using today's labor and
material prices, to replace the structure with a similar one. If
the structure is not new, the assessor determines the
depreciation since it was built. The resulting value is added to
an estimate of the market value of the land. This method, called
the cost approach, is used to value special purpose and utility
properties.
The third way is to analyze how much income a
property (like an apartment building, store, or factory) will
produce if rented. Operating expenses, insurance, maintenance
costs, financing terms, and how much money expected to be earned
are considered. This method is called the income approach .
Properties in sub optimal uses generally may not be assessed
at market value; they must be assessed at their current-use
value.
Assessors with computers can estimate values more
efficiently than by hand. Computer Assisted Mass Appraisal
(CAMA) techniques are used to analyze sales and estimate values
for many properties at once.
Once the assessor estimates
the market value of a property, its assessment is calculated.
New York State law provides that all property within a
municipality be assessed at a uniform percent of market value.
The level of assessment can be five percent, 20 percent, 50
percent, or any other fraction, up to 100 percent. Everyone pays
his or her fair share of taxes as long as every property in a
locality is assessed at the same percent of value.
For
example, a house with a market value of $100,000 located in a
town that assesses at 15 percent of value would have an
assessment of $15,000. The assessment is multiplied by the tax
rate for each taxing jurisdiction - city, town, village, school
district, etc. - to determine the tax bills. (For further
explanation of this process, see “How the Property Tax
Works.”
Does the Assessor have to be let into your
home?
The New York State Assessors' Association
pamphlet, “Understanding Assessments and Property Taxes,”
states:
The Assessor has a right to go to your front door
and seek admittance (possibly he or she will only want to
inspect the exterior of the house) but must leave the premises
if asked to do so.
If it is really inconvenient to allow
an inspection at that time, tell your visitor just that and try
to make an appointment for some other date. However, if you can
spare the ten minutes or so that will usually be required, we
urge that you allow it to proceed so that the information
necessary for equitable assessment can be gathered.
The
pamphlet cautions property owners not to allow anyone into their
homes without proper identification, preferably I.D. cards with
photographs signed by an authorized town or city official. “No
identification — no entry!”
What Else Does an Assessor
Do?
The assessor performs many other administrative
functions, such as inspecting new construction and major
improvements to existing structures. This ensures that the
record of each property's physical inventory is current and that
the appropriate improvements are assessed.
The assessor
also approves and keeps track of property tax exemptions. Among
the most common are the senior citizen, School Tax Relief
(STAR), veterans, agricultural, and business exemptions.
The Real Property System is a computer software package
(created and maintained by ORPS) to assist assessment
administration functions. It is available to assessors who have
the necessary computer equipment, and allows them to
electronically maintain the assessment roll and related records.
Corrections to State form RP-5217 can also be sent to the State
Board electronically. The Real Property System also includes
computer-assisted mass appraisal programs for value estimation
and assessment updates.
Legally, the assessor must be
present at all public hearings of the Board of Assessment Review
(BAR). The BAR may request the assessor to present evidence in
support of tentative assessments being grieved by taxpayers.
After meeting in private without the assessor, the BAR makes its
decisions and orders any appropriate changes to the assessment
roll before it becomes final. If assessment reductions are
denied by the BAR, and property owners appeal to Small Claims
Assessment Review, the assessor prepares evidence for those
hearings.
The assessor reviews every transfer of real
property for accuracy, including the basic information on the
buyer, seller, and sale price. Assessment records are updated,
and any unusual conditions affecting the transfer are also
verified. Results are recorded on form RP-5217 at the real
estate closing. The assessor makes corrections to this form.
ORPS requires assessors to file an annual report on
assessment changes. ORPS also "equalizes" property
assessments to a common full (market) value in each
municipality. More information on the ORPS full value
measurement program is available.
Where Can I Go With
Questions?
The assessor is continually communicating
with the public, answering questions, and dealing with concerns
raised by taxpayers. Anyone can examine the assessment roll and
property records at any time. However, between Taxable Status
Day and the filing of the tentative roll (generally, March
through May), it should be done by appointment.
It is up
to individual property owners to monitor their own assessments.
Taxpayers who feel they are not being fairly assessed should
meet with their assessor before the tentative assessment roll is
established. In an informal setting, the assessor can explain
how the assessment was determined and the rationale behind
it.
Assessors are interested only in fairly assessing
property in their assessing unit. If your assessment is correct
and your tax bill still seems too high, the assessor cannot
change that. Complaints to the assessor must be about how
property is assessed.
Taxpayers unhappy with growing
property tax bills should not be concerned only with
assessments. They should also examine the scope of budgets and
expenditures of the taxing jurisdictions (counties, cities,
towns, villages, school districts, etc.) and address those
issues in appropriate and available public forums.
Informal meetings with assessors to resolve assessment
questions about the next assessment roll can take place
throughout the year. If, after speaking with your assessor, you
still feel you are unfairly assessed, the booklet, “How to File
For a Review of Your Assessment” describes how to prepare and
file a complaint with the Board of Assessment Review for an
assessment reduction, and indicates the time of year it can be
done.