What are your real odds of winning a property tax protest? We analyzed the data across Texas and California to show you actual success rates, average savings, and what separates winning protests from losing ones.

Here's a stat that should make you rethink skipping your property tax protest: 80-90% of informal protests in Texas result in some reduction.
That's not a typo. The vast majority of homeowners who show up to challenge their assessed value walk away paying less.
Yet only about 5% of property owners actually file a protest each year. That gap between success rates and participation rates represents billions in unnecessary taxes paid.
Texas has one of the most homeowner-friendly protest systems in the country. Here's what the data shows:
County appraisal districts use mass appraisal methods to value hundreds of thousands of properties. These broad-brush approaches inevitably create errors and inequities.
When you bring comparable sales data showing your home is overvalued, appraisers often agreeābecause the data speaks for itself.
Success rates vary by county, but major Texas metros consistently show strong outcomes:
California's Proposition 13 system works differently, but appeals still succeed at high rates when properly filed.
When market values drop below your assessed value, Proposition 8 allows temporary reductions:
For appeals that go to formal hearing:
Success rates don't tell the whole story. Here's what actually determines outcomes:
The 10-20% who don't get reductions typically:
A 10-15% reduction translates to real money:
These savings compound. A successful protest this year often carries forward, saving you money for years to come.
With 80-90% success rates, why do only 5% of homeowners file?
Or let TaxDrop handle it. We analyze your property, gather evidence, and file your protestāyou only pay if we save you money.
The data is clear: property tax protests work. With success rates of 80-90% in Texas and 70-80% for well-prepared California appeals, the odds are strongly in your favor.
The real question isn't whether protesting works. It's why you haven't done it yet.
Let our licensed property tax experts assess your tax bill for potential savings. Over 80% of protests get a reduction of more than $1,000 and it takes less than 3 minutes to enroll.
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Texas property tax protests have an 80-90% success rate at the informal hearing stage. This means the vast majority of homeowners who file a protest receive some reduction in their assessed value. Success rates vary slightly by county, but major metros like Harris, Dallas, and Travis counties all report rates above 75%.
Successful protests typically result in a 10-15% reduction in assessed value. For a $500,000 home, this translates to roughly $500-$1,250 in annual tax savings. The exact amount depends on your local tax rate and how overassessed your property was.
County appraisal districts use mass appraisal methods to value hundreds of thousands of properties simultaneously. This broad approach inevitably creates errors and inequities. When homeowners present comparable sales data showing their home is overvalued, appraisers often agree because the evidence is clear.
Only about 5% of homeowners file property tax protests each year, despite success rates of 80-90%. Most homeowners either don't know they can protest, assume the process is too complicated, or miss filing deadlines. This represents billions in unnecessary taxes paid annually.
Ryder Meehan is the Co-Founder of TaxDrop and a Licensed Property Tax Protest Consultant