digplanet beta 1: Athena
Share digplanet:

Agriculture

Applied sciences

Arts

Belief

Business

Chronology

Culture

Education

Environment

Geography

Health

History

Humanities

Language

Law

Life

Mathematics

Nature

People

Politics

Science

Society

Technology

A property tax (or millage tax) is a levy on property that the owner is required to pay. The tax is levied by the governing authority of the jurisdiction in which the property is located; it may be paid to a national government, a federated state, a county/geographical region, or a municipality. Multiple jurisdictions may tax the same property.

There are four broad types of property: land, improvements to land (immovable man-made objects, such as buildings), personal property (movable man-made objects), and intangible property. Real property (also called real estate or realty) means the combination of land and improvements. Under a property tax system, the government requires and/or performs an appraisal of the monetary value of each property, and tax is assessed in proportion to that value. Forms of property tax used vary among countries and jurisdictions.

A special assessment tax is sometimes confused with property tax. These are two distinct forms of taxation: one (ad valorem tax) relies upon the fair market value of the property being taxed for justification, and the other (special assessment) relies upon a special enhancement called a "benefit" for its justification.

The property tax rate is often given as a percentage. It may also be expressed as a per mil (amount of tax per thousand currency units of property value), which is also known as a millage rate or mill is also one-thousandth of a currency unit.) To calculate the property tax, the authority will multiply the assessed value of the property by the mill rate and then divide by 1,000. For example, a property with an assessed value of $50,000 located in a municipality with a mill rate of 20 mills would have a property tax bill of $1,000 per year.[1]

Contents

Property taxes by jurisdiction [edit]

Property tax rates, assessment rules, and valuations vary widely by jurisdiction.

Australia [edit]

Australia has property taxes known as property or land rates. Land rates and frequency of payment are determined by local councils. Each council has land valuers who value the land's worth. The land's worth is the value of the land only; it does not include existing dwellings on the property. The assessed value of the land determines the total charges of rates. Rates can range from $100 per quarter to $, but frequency varies by locality. Australian property owners also pay water rates. Some councils include this in the total of the rates notice and provide a breakdown of water and land charges. Other councils may charge this separately. Depending on the municipality, water rates can be either a flat fee, user pay or a combination of both. Prospective buyers can get details about land and water rates from the local council before purchase.

Australia also has stamp duty, applied at the time a property is sold, by the purchaser to the Office of State Revenue. In addition to stamp duty there is also a Land Transfer Charge under the NSW State Revenue Legislation Amendment Bill 2010 (1 July 2010). The Charge will be levied as an ad valorem tax to be paid by the purchaser, for property above $500,000 in value, and is payable at the time a transfer document is lodged for registration with Land & Property Information (LPI).

Stamp duty rates are applied on a sliding scale of 1% to 6.75% based on the value of property and the state of Australia.

Canada [edit]

Many provinces in Canada levy property tax on real estate based upon the current use and value of the land. This is the major source of revenue for most municipal governments in Canada. While property tax levels vary among municipalities in a province there is usually common property assessment or valuation criteria laid out in provincial legislation. There is a trend to use a market value standard for valuation purposes in most provinces with varying revaluation cycles. A number of provinces have established an annual reassessment cycle where market activity warrants while others have longer periods between valuation periods.

Calculating Individual Property Taxes

In Ontario, for most properties (e.g., residential, farms), the property taxes can be calculated by multiplying the phased-in assessment indicated on the Property Assessment Notice by the tax rate.

Municipal tax rate x phased-in assessment for the particular taxation year = municipal portion of tax

county/regional tax rate x phased-in assessment for the particular taxation year = county/regional portion of tax

education tax rate x phased-in assessment for the particular taxation year = education portion of tax

municipal portion of tax + county/regional portion of tax + education portion of tax = Total Property Tax

In some cases (e.g., commercial, industrial, multi-residential properties), the Province or municipality may implement measures that affect the actual taxes paid on a property.

Chile [edit]

Land property taxes, called "territorial tax" or "contributions", are paid annually in four payments during the year. The rate varies between 1 to 2% of the fiscal value, depending on the use of the property (agricultural, habitation, commercial). The fiscal value is determined for each property by the Internal Tax Service, based on the land area and built area, the value of the construction materials, age, use and distance to commercial areas. The fiscal value is usually much lower than the market value. Non-business properties valued below a certain fiscal value are exempt (currently about US$33K). Properties used for business face no exemption.[2] The collected taxes go to the municipality where the property is located.[3] All municipalities contribute a share of the received income to a "common municipal fund", which is then redistributed back to all municipalities according to its needs (poverty rate, etc.).[4][5]

Denmark [edit]

The property tax in Denmark is 1% for property valued at less than DKK 3 million and 3% for property valued above DKK 3 million.

Greece [edit]

Greece has 5 Property Taxes. Three Municipal Property Taxes (ΤΑΠ/ΔΤ/ΔΦ) based on the square footage of the property and the land it occupies. A property tax(ΕΤΗΔΕ) of 2011–2012 that based upon floor-area and is to be collected with electricity bills .[2] An Additional progressive Tax (ΦΑΠ) that is based on the arbitrary estimated net-worth of all properties and can reach 2%.

Hong Kong [edit]

In Hong Kong, there is a kind of tax named a property tax, but it is not an ad valorem tax; it is actually classified as an income tax.

According to HK Inland Revenue Ordinance IRO s5B, all property owners shall not be subject to this tax; unless the HK property owner has received a consideration, the example is rental income for the year of assessment. The property tax shall be computed on the net assessable value at the standard rate.

Year of Assessment [edit]

The period of assessment is from 1 April to 31 March of the following year.

Net assessable value [edit]

The formula is:

Net assessable value = 80% of Assessable value.
HK property tax payable = Net assessment value X Property tax standard rate
Assessable value = Rental income + Premium + (Rental bad debt recovered — Irrecoverable rent) – Rates paid by owner.

Jamaica [edit]

This tax is paid in the same way as a mortgage, an annual payment depending on the value of one's assets, such as property.

India [edit]

Property tax or 'house tax' is a local tax on buildings, along with appurtenant land, and imposed on owners. It resembles the US-type wealth tax and differs from the excise-type UK rate. The tax power is vested in the states and it is delegated by law to the local bodies, specifying the valuation method, rate band, and collection procedures. The tax base is the annual rental value (ARV) or area-based rating. Owner-occupied and other properties not producing rent are assessed on cost and then converted into ARV by applying a percentage of cost, usually six percent. Vacant land is generally exempt. Central government properties are exempt. Instead a 'service charge' is permissible under executive order. Properties of foreign missions also enjoy tax exemption without an insistence for reciprocity. The tax is usually accompanied by a number of service taxes, e.g., water tax, drainage tax, conservancy (sanitation) tax, lighting tax, all using the same tax base. The rate structure is flat on rural (panchayat) properties, but in the urban (municipal) areas it is mildly progressive with about 80% of assessments falling in the first two slabs.[6]

Ireland [edit]

A Local Property Tax will come into effect in Republic of Ireland on 1 July 2013, and will be collected by the Revenue Commissioners. The tax will be on residential properties, with the owner a property being liable (though in the case of leases over twenty years, the tenant will become liable). The revenue raised will be used to fund the provision of services by local authorities. Such services currently include public parks; libraries; open spaces and leisure amenities; planning and development; fire and emergency services; maintenance and cleaning of streets; and street lighting.

The tax will be based upon the market value of the property, taxed via a system of market bands. The initial national central rate of the tax will be 0.18% of a property's value up to €1 million, and in the case of properties valued over €1 million, 0.25% on the balance. From 1 January 2015, local authorities will be able to vary LPT rates -/+ 15% of the national central rate.

In the case of properties valued over €1 million, no banding will apply – 0.18% will be charged on the first €1 million (€1,800) and 0.25% on the balance. The government estimates that 85% to 90% of all properties will fall within the first five taxation bands.[7][8]

Netherlands [edit]

Property tax (Dutch: Onroerendezaakbelasting (OZB)) is levied on homes on a municipal basis in two parts: for the one who lives in the house, and for the owner of the house. There are some exemptions for widows and widowers. Those with a rental home are liable only for the living part[clarification needed] of the tax.[citation needed]

United Kingdom [edit]

There is currently no ad valorem tax on residential property. Two former systems were dropped because of their extreme unpopularity:

  • Schedule A income tax, a central government tax that was levied on the imputed rent, that is the rent that owner-occupiers of land would have been receiving from a tenant had they not been living in the houses they owned. However, actual (as opposed to imputed) rent is still subject to income tax under Schedule A.
  • Rates, a local government tax that was levied in proportion to the assessed value of property; this proportion was not fixed or set by a schedule or formula but floated according to the budget decided on by councillors (originally elected by only ratepayers), giving rise to a charge distributed proportionally over all the relevant properties. This was replaced under the Thatcher government by the Community Charge (popularly known as "poll tax"), which proved even more unpopular than the rates, and was replaced by a mixed Council Tax which combines elements of property tax and a poll tax. Rates are still (2010) levied on business property, though some classes of business are exempt.

United States [edit]

In the United States, property tax on real estate is usually levied by local government, at the municipal or county level. Rates vary across the states, between about 0.2% and 4% of the home value.[9] The assessment is made up of two components—the improvement or building value, and the land or site value. The property tax is the main tax supporting local education, police/fire protection, local governments, some free medical services, and most of other local infrastructure. Also, many U.S. state and local jurisdictions impose personal property taxes.

See also [edit]

References [edit]


Original courtesy of Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Property_tax — Please support Wikipedia.
A portion of the proceeds from advertising on Digplanet goes to supporting Wikipedia.
1000000 videos foundNext > 

Jay Noone: How to NOT pay property taxes

Jay Noone, Property Tax Nonparticipant, explains to Adam how he avoids paying property taxes.

The Property Tax Scandal in The US - Professor Richard D Wolff

PUBLISHED ON OCTOBER 16, 2011 Local governments in the US (cities, towns and villages) rely chiefly on property taxes to fund their activities (public educat...

About Property Taxes and Assessments

A brief overview of the Real Property Tax in New York State, including how property is assessed and how property taxes are calculated. Presented by the New Y...

Remove Your Property From The Tax Roll Part 1

Steve joins Bo & Rocko and explains how to Remove Your Property From The Tax Roll. Part 1 of 7. http://freedomslips.com Air Date: 3-28-2012 http://freedomsli...

Property Tax Revolution - North Dakota

On June 12, 2012, the voters of North Dakota will vote on Measure 2, a comprehensive state constitutional amendment that, if passed, will abolish the propert...

Indiana's Property Tax Caps

An educational video about Indiana's property tax caps. Part of a series of videos about Indiana local government from the Purdue University Cooperative Exte...

Liberty Activist Pays Property Tax in $1 Bills

Free Keene blogger and liberty activist Ian Freeman pays a $2700 property tax demand to the city bureaucrats of Keene, NH for 6 months of "service".

Property Tax Ireland: Play them at their own game

Attack the Tax, class action against the Irish government, be part of it. www.attackthetax.com.

David Baldinger - School Property Tax elimination HB/SB 76 Legislation

David Baldinger explains the key points on HB/SB 76 for the elimination of school property taxes and the benefits to Pennsylvanians.

Mary Lou McDonald - How do Labour defend taking Family Home Tax from struggling people?

Mary Lou McDonald confronts Eamon Gilmore over his party's support for taking the Property Tax from citizens' bank accounts, social welfare and wages. Unable...

1000000 videos foundNext > 

40474 news items

 
Baltimore Sun
Wed, 22 May 2013 04:41:50 -0700

Baltimore's spending board voted Wednesday to approve another property tax break for city homeowners, part of Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake's plan to cut property taxes by 22 percent over 10 years. The tax credit approved by the Board of Estimates ...

KCRG

KCRG
Wed, 22 May 2013 16:05:00 -0700

The property tax plan will gradually reduce taxable assessments of commercial properties by 10 percent and provide property tax credits geared for smaller businesses. The deal also limits the amount that residential property assessments can grow.
 
Syracuse.com (blog)
Wed, 22 May 2013 10:24:06 -0700

The state's property tax cap had a big impact on school budget votes Tuesday, with only seven districts statewide succeeding in overriding it. In Onondaga, Cayuga, Cortland, Madison and Oswego counties, only two districts -- North Syracuse and Moravia ...
 
Post-Tribune
Wed, 22 May 2013 14:24:03 -0700

Tuesday the Lake County Property Tax Assessment Board of Appeals ruled against granting the 35 percent reduction requested by property tax consultant Don Feicht with Uzelac & Associates of Valparaiso. Feicht is representing Morrison Construction in the ...
 
NOLA.com
Tue, 21 May 2013 18:54:49 -0700

A push to raise the constitutional cap on New Orleans' property tax rates to fund additional fire and police services sailed through the Louisiana House on Tuesday. The bill would lift a restriction in the state Constitution limiting the amount Orleans ...
 
The Jackson Citizen Patriot - MLive.com
Wed, 22 May 2013 14:17:30 -0700

Jackson City Council passes city budget, includes small property tax reduction for residents. Print · Will Forgrave | wforgrav@mlive.com By Will Forgrave | wforgrav@mlive.com The Jackson Citizen Patriot Follow on Twitter on May 22, 2013 at 5:00 PM ...
 
The Business Journal of the Greater Triad Area (blog)
Wed, 22 May 2013 09:30:43 -0700

The proposed $459 million budget for Greensboro keeps the property tax rate the same, but includes some fee hikes, the News & Record reports. Those include a proposed 3.5 percent increase in water rates and 7.5 percent increase in water rates for those ...
 
WBTV
Wed, 22 May 2013 15:38:13 -0700

Shields says the property tax increase will help pay for services in the current budget and deal with increased demand. The county says funding is needed to "address the growth in CMS student population, opening of new parks, libraries, and merit ...
Loading

Oops, we seem to be having trouble contacting Twitter

Talk About Property tax

You can talk about Property tax with people all over the world in our discussions.

Support Wikipedia

A portion of the proceeds from advertising on Digplanet goes to supporting Wikipedia. Please add your support for Wikipedia!