A Ohio property tax appeal is how you challenge an over-stated home value and bring your bill back down. You do not appeal the bill itself — a Ohio property tax appeal challenges your home’s assessed value, and if that value is higher than what your home would sell for, lowering it lowers your tax. In Ohio, appeals are heard by County Board of Revision (BOR). This guide covers who
to file with, the deadline, how to build your case, and what happens at the hearing — all of it something you can do yourself, for free.
Ohio Property Tax at a Glance
| Who hears your appeal | County Board of Revision (BOR) |
| How Ohio reassesses | County auditors do a full reappraisal every 6 years (sexennial) with a statistical ‘triennial update’ in year 3. Homes are assessed at 35% of market value. |
Verified from official state and county sources.
In This Ohio Guide:
How a Ohio Property Tax Appeal Works
Your Ohio property tax is your assessed value multiplied by your local tax rate. You cannot vote down the rate, but you can challenge the assessed value — and that is where most overpayment hides. If the assessor has your home valued higher than a fair market sale price, you are paying more than your share, and a Ohio property tax appeal is the fix. For context on how often
values are set here: County auditors do a full reappraisal every 6 years (sexennial) with a statistical ‘triennial update’ in year 3.
Homes are assessed at 35% of market value. A Ohio property tax appeal is decided by County Board of Revision (BOR), which reviews your evidence and can lower an over-stated value. It is an ordinary, expected step — assessors handle these every year, and you do not need a lawyer to start one.
Think your Ohio bill is too high? Check in two minutes.
The Ohio Property Tax Appeal Deadline
This is the part people miss. The window for a Ohio property tax appeal is short and firm. In Ohio: File a valuation complaint (Form DTE 1) with your County Board of Revision between January 1 and March 31 – a strict statutory deadline (ORC 5715.19). Confirm your county’s exact date (in some counties it can extend to the first-half tax due date). Further appeal goes to the Ohio Board
of Tax Appeals within 30 days of the BOR decision.
Mark the date the moment your assessment notice arrives — once the window closes, you generally wait until the next tax year to try again.
How to Prepare Your Ohio Property Tax Appeal
Your case is simply evidence that your home is worth less than its assessed value. The strongest proof is recent sales of similar homes near you that sold for less than your assessed value — three to five comparable sales make a solid packet. Also pull your property record card from the assessor and check it for plain errors: too much square footage, the wrong number of bedrooms or bathrooms,
a finished basement you do not have.
A factual error is one of the easiest wins, and it can carry a whole appeal on its own. A recent independent appraisal or photos of condition problems (a failing roof, foundation cracks) help too.
After You File Your Ohio Property Tax Appeal
After you file with County Board of Revision (BOR), a Ohio property tax appeal usually gets a hearing where you present your evidence and the assessor presents theirs. Keep it factual and about value — comparable sales, not how much the bill hurts. Many appeals are settled or reduced at this stage. If you are not satisfied with the decision, most states allow a further appeal to a state board
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or court; the notice you receive will explain that next step and its own deadline.
Whatever you do, keep paying the bill as billed while your appeal is pending, so you do not pick up penalties on top of everything else.
Don’t want to appeal your Ohio taxes yourself? A property tax appeal service can file everything for you and usually only charges if it wins — typically a share of what it saves you. It is one option; you can also appeal on your own for free.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I file a Ohio property tax appeal?
File an appeal of your assessed value with County Board of Revision (BOR). File a valuation complaint (Form DTE 1) with your County Board of Revision between January 1 and March 31 – a strict statutory deadline (ORC 5715.19). Confirm your county’s exact date (in some counties it can extend to the first-half tax due date). Further appeal goes to the Ohio Board of Tax Appeals within 30 days of
the BOR decision.
Bring comparable sales showing your home is worth less than its assessed value.
What is the deadline for a Ohio property tax appeal?
File a valuation complaint (Form DTE 1) with your County Board of Revision between January 1 and March 31 – a strict statutory deadline (ORC 5715.19). Confirm your county’s exact date (in some counties it can extend to the first-half tax due date). Further appeal goes to the Ohio Board of Tax Appeals within 30 days of the BOR decision. Confirm the exact date with your local assessor.
Do I need a lawyer to appeal my Ohio property taxes?
No. Homeowners routinely file their own appeals for free. Evidence of value — comparable sales or an appraisal — matters far more than legal representation at the first level.
Will appealing make my assessment go up?
An appeal at the homeowner level is about proving your value is too high; the board’s job is to correct an over-assessment. Bring solid comparable sales so your case is clear.
Ohio Property Tax Sources & Data
- Tax Foundation — Property Taxes by State & County: taxfoundation.org
- U.S. Census Bureau (American Community Survey): census.gov/acs
- Lincoln Institute of Land Policy (property tax data): lincolninst.edu
Appeal details for Ohio on this page — which board hears appeals, the filing deadline, and the assessment
cycle — were verified from official Ohio state and county sources and last checked in July 2026. Deadlines and
procedures change and vary by county; confirm your exact date with County Board of Revision (BOR) or your county assessor before you
file.
More Property Tax Guides
- Property Tax Rates by State
- Property Tax by County
- Are You Overpaying? Over-Assessment Checker
- Property Tax Exemption Finder
Disclaimer: This guide is informational only and is not legal, tax, or financial advice. Know Property Tax is an independent educational resource. It is not a government agency, not a county assessor, and not a tax-appeal service. Property tax rates, bills, exemptions, and deadlines change over time and vary by county and property. Confirm anything that affects your taxes with your county assessor or a licensed professional before you act.