USA TODAY US Edition

HIGHEST AND LOWEST property taxes by state

- Janna Herron

How much you pay in property taxes often comes down to which side of a county, city or district line you’re on. And if you’re a homebuyer this spring, it’s another important factor to consider while you house hunt.

Property taxes largely fund public schools but also other local services such as roads and police. A portion of your monthly mortgage payment goes to property taxes, so if you’re on a tight budget, a higher property tax bill could be onerous.

For instance, in Buffalo and Syracuse in New York, the property tax portion of the monthly bill often can be higher than the mortgage part because tax rates are so high there, says Lawrence Yun, the chief economist for the National Associatio­n of Realtors.

“Property tax is a critical piece of informatio­n in the home purchase decision and something a buyer should ask about before making the purchase,” Yun says.

Property taxes are hyperlocal. Some states levy a property tax, but for the most part, these taxes are imposed on the county, city or district levels. That means a house down the street from yours could have a higher or lower tax burden than yours.

Why property taxes vary

In an extreme historical example, two nearly identical houses in the same subdivisio­n that spanned the town line between Concord and Bow, New Hampshire, had vastly different property tax burdens, according to Joan Youngman, chair of the department of valuation and taxation at the Lincoln Institute of

Land Policy, a think tank on the taxation and use of land. Concord’s property tax rate was about twice as much as Bow’s, even though both shared the same high school.

Why was that? Because Bow’s biggest property taxpayer was a power plant, rather than its few residents. In Concord, the homeowners bore a bigger share of the tax burden. How much owners of commercial, industrial and utility properties pay in taxes can affect your rate.

Home values are another reason why one city has a higher property tax than another. Those areas with higher housing values can charge a lower tax rate, but still raise a lot in revenue.

Take California and Ohio. In Ohio, the tax property rate is the 12th highest in the country at 1.56%. A median house in Ohio – valued at $129,900 – brings in $2,032 in property taxes. But in California, the tax rate is much lower at 0.81% – the 34th lowest in the U.S. – but the median home there (valued at $385,500) raises $3,104 in property taxes.

Other tax considerat­ions

Property taxes aren’t the only tax burdens, either, that residents should consider, Youngman says. For instance, Bridgeport, Connecticu­t, has the highest property tax rate but no local sales or income taxes. Birmingham, Alabama, by contrast, has the 11th lowest property tax, but “a host other taxes,” she said.

“If you put those together, Birmingham’s tax burden is actually higher than Bridgeport’s,” she said.

State property taxes

Overall, the effective property tax rate for homeowners is 1.2% in the U.S. On a median home of $178,600, that’s an annual tax bill of $2,149. Eighteen states have effective rates that are the same or higher than the U.S. rate, while 32 states and the District of Columbia have lower rates. Using data from the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, USA TODAY ranked property taxes among states by the effective tax rate for homeowners, rather than the median tax paid, which is affected by overall home values. If your state doesn’t appear in the lists below, visit the Lincoln Institute’s online tool to find out where it stands.

 ?? THINKSTOCK ?? LOW: South Carolina is No. 6.
THINKSTOCK LOW: South Carolina is No. 6.
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SHUTTERSTO­CK.COM HIGH: Texas is No. 6.
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GETTY IMAGES LOW: Louisiana is No. 3.
 ?? THINKSTOCK ?? HIGH: New Hampshire is No. 3.
THINKSTOCK HIGH: New Hampshire is No. 3.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The property tax rate for homeowners is 1.2% in the U.S.
GETTY IMAGES The property tax rate for homeowners is 1.2% in the U.S.

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