Find Your Texas Property Tax Rate and Estimate the Real Bill
Texas does not use one simple statewide property tax rate. Your bill is built from several local rates, including school district, county, city and special district taxes. This guide shows how to find the correct rate, combine the taxing units, estimate your bill, and avoid common mistakes that create wrong property tax estimates.
Quick Answer: What Is the Texas Property Tax Rate?
There is no single Texas property tax rate that applies to every homeowner. Your actual rate depends on the local taxing units that cover your property. One home may have school, county and city taxes, while another nearby home may also have a MUD, hospital district or emergency service district.
The number most homeowners need is the combined local property tax rate. This is the total of all rates that apply to the property. Once you know the combined rate and taxable value, you can estimate the tax bill.
How to Find Your Exact Texas Property Tax Rate
The best source is your official tax statement because it lists the taxing units and rates tied to your property. If you do not have the statement, use the county tax office property tax search or your county appraisal district property record.
Use your account number, owner name or property address. The tax office usually shows tax bills, payment status, taxing units and rates.
Look for the table that shows each taxing unit. You may see school district, county, city, hospital district, junior college, MUD, ESD or other units.
If the statement does not clearly show a total, add each local taxing unit rate that applies to your property.
Your bill is based on taxable value after exemptions and limits. Do not calculate only from the appraised market value unless no exemptions apply.
The Comptroller rate page is useful for reported taxing unit rates, but you still need to match the correct units for your exact property.
You can also use our Texas Property Tax Calculator after you find the combined rate.
Texas Property Tax Rate Estimator
Use this quick tool to combine local rates and estimate the tax impact. It is designed for homeowners, buyers, investors and seniors who want to understand the rate side of the bill before checking the official tax office record.
Texas Property Tax Rate Formula
Most Texas property tax estimates use taxable value and the combined local tax rate. The rate is commonly shown as dollars per $100 of taxable value, but many homeowners think about it as a percentage.
Estimated Annual Tax = Taxable Value × Combined Local Rate
Example:
$300,000 taxable value × 1.90% = about $5,700 annual property tax
If your statement shows rates as “per $100 value,” a rate of 1.9000 means $1.90 per $100 of taxable value. For a simple estimate, that works like 1.90%.
Which Local Taxing Units Can Affect Your Rate?
A Texas property tax bill may include several local rates. This is why two homes in the same city can have different total tax rates. Boundaries matter.
| Taxing Unit | What It Usually Funds | Rate Tip |
|---|---|---|
| School District | Public schools and school district operations/debt. | Often a major part of the bill. Homestead and over-65 rules can strongly affect this line. |
| County | County services, courts, roads, law enforcement and general county operations. | County rate applies based on county boundaries, not just mailing city. |
| City | City services such as police, fire, streets, parks and local administration. | A property outside city limits may not have the same city tax line. |
| MUD / Utility District | Water, sewer, drainage or infrastructure debt in some developments. | Newer subdivisions may have a MUD rate that changes the total bill significantly. |
| Emergency Service District | Fire, EMS or emergency response services. | Common in some unincorporated or fast-growing areas. |
| Hospital / Junior College / Special District | Specific local services approved for that district. | These small lines can still affect total tax, especially when estimating escrow. |
Texas Property Tax Rate Tips for Home Buyers
Home buyers should be extra careful with property tax estimates. The seller’s current tax bill may include homestead exemption, over-65 tax ceiling, disabled veteran exemption, agricultural valuation or other benefits that may not apply to the buyer after closing.
Real estate websites often show last year’s tax amount, not your future bill. Always verify with the official county tax office or CAD record.
A low home price can still come with a high total rate if the property has a MUD, PID, ESD or other special district.
Common Mistakes When Searching Texas Property Tax Rates
| Mistake | Why It Creates Wrong Numbers | Better Action |
|---|---|---|
| Using an average Texas rate | Average rates do not match your exact local taxing units. | Use your property’s official combined rate. |
| Using county rate only | School, city and special district rates may be missing. | Add every taxing unit shown on the statement. |
| Ignoring exemptions | The rate applies to taxable value, not always market value. | Check homestead, senior, disabled and veteran exemptions. |
| Assuming CAD sets the rate | The CAD appraises value; local taxing units adopt rates. | Ask the CAD about value/exemptions and tax office about bills/rates. |
| Comparing two homes only by city | Different school districts or MUD boundaries can change the rate. | Compare exact taxing unit lists, not just ZIP code or city name. |
Related Texas Property Tax Guides
Estimate annual tax, monthly escrow, taxable value and exemption savings.
Use the calculatorUnderstand homestead, over-65, disabled, veteran and local exemption basics.
Read exemption guideLearn over-65 exemption, school tax ceiling and senior deferral basics.
Read senior guideOfficial Texas Property Tax Rate Resources
Reported tax rate information by taxing unit.
Open tax rate dataOfficial explanation of no-new-revenue and voter-approval tax rate concepts.
Read rate calculation rulesStatewide property tax assistance resources from the Texas Comptroller.
Open property tax assistanceTexas Property Tax Rate FAQs
What is the Texas property tax rate?
Texas does not have one statewide property tax rate. Your rate depends on the local taxing units for your property, such as school district, county, city and special districts.
Where can I find my Texas property tax rate?
Check your county tax statement, county tax office property search, county appraisal district property record, or the Texas Comptroller property tax rate resources.
How do I calculate Texas property tax using the rate?
Subtract exemptions from value to get taxable value, then multiply taxable value by the combined local tax rate. Rates are commonly shown per $100 of taxable value.
Why is my property tax rate different from my neighbor’s?
Your property may be in different school, city, MUD, emergency service, hospital or other special district boundaries.
Does the appraisal district set the tax rate?
No. The appraisal district sets property value and handles exemptions. Local taxing units adopt rates, and the tax office usually collects the bill.
Why did my bill increase if the rate went down?
Your taxable value may have increased, exemptions may have changed, new improvements may have been added, or other taxing unit rates may have changed.
What is a combined Texas property tax rate?
It is the total of all local rates that apply to your property. This may include school, county, city, MUD, ESD, hospital, college and other special district rates.
Should home buyers use the seller’s tax rate and tax bill?
Use it only as a starting point. Seller exemptions, senior ceilings or special valuations may not apply after purchase, so buyers should estimate based on their own situation.

Founded by Mahesh Kumar, AppraisalDistrict.org is built on the belief that public information should be accessible and accurate. We have replaced AI-generated ‘fluff’ and automated scraping with 100% manual human verification. With over 15 years of experience in real estate and digital journalism, we help you find the right data without the frustration of broken links.
Search Smarter, Estimate Taxes, Check Exemptions and Prepare for a Protest
Use this free tool before you visit a county appraisal district, property search portal, tax office, or exemption page. It helps you understand property value, taxable value, possible savings, protest value, and the next official step.
What do you need help with today?
Choose your main reason for visiting. The tool will show the best next step and quick estimate.
Use this tool to check your appraisal notice, exemption savings, protest value, and official next step.
Use the tax calculator before trusting only the sale price or mortgage estimate.
Property Search Helper
Use this when a county property search portal is confusing. It shows which search method is usually best.
Property Tax Estimate Calculator
Estimate annual property tax using appraised value, assessment ratio, exemptions, and combined tax rate.
Homestead and Exemption Savings
Estimate how much a homestead, senior, disability, veteran, or local exemption may reduce tax.
Appraisal Notice Review
Compare last year value with this year value and see whether the increase deserves closer review.
Property Tax Protest Savings
Estimate possible savings if your appraised value is reduced after protest, correction, evidence review, or appraisal review board hearing.
Property Tax Protest and Exemption Checklist
Use this checklist before you file a protest, apply for exemption, or call the appraisal district.
Before calling, write your property ID, owner name, property address, and question on paper. It saves time.
Do not call the CAD to pay tax bills unless the local article says they collect taxes. In many counties, the tax office collects payment.
Official Resource Finder
Enter county and state to create safe searches for official CAD pages, property search, tax payment, exemptions, maps, forms, and protest help.
CAD vs Tax Office
- Appraisal District: value, exemptions, ownership records, maps, protest.
- Tax Office: tax bill, payment, receipt, delinquent balance, penalty.
Best place to use this
Add this tool after the first major content section or before the FAQ area. It gives visitors a reason to interact before leaving the page.
Important estimate note
This tool gives educational estimates only. Final values, exemptions, tax rates, bills, payments, and deadlines must be confirmed with official county sources.
