Free Review
Dallas County, Texas

Dallas County property tax protest.

Dallas County assessments reach hundreds of thousands of owners, and plenty of them are set too high. We protest over assessed homes, land and commercial property across the county, and we handle the filing and the DCAD hearing for you. You pay only if we bring your value down.

The basics

Who sets your Dallas County value.

Your property is appraised by the Dallas Central Appraisal District, or DCAD, based in Dallas. Each spring the district mails a Notice of Appraised Value that sets the number your tax bill is built on. If that number is too high, the time to challenge it is short.

A protest is filed with DCAD and, if it is not resolved informally, heard by the Dallas County Appraisal Review Board. We handle both for you. You do not deal with the district and you do not attend the hearing.

One thing worth knowing: DCAD appraises your property, but it does not collect the tax. That is the county tax office, which sends the bill later in the year based on the value the district set.

Dallas Central Appraisal District
District Dallas Central Appraisal District (DCAD)
Office 2949 N Stemmons Fwy, Dallas, TX 75247
Phone 214-631-0910
Website dallascad.org
Protests to Dallas County Appraisal Review Board

District details can change. Confirm current contact information and deadlines with DCAD directly before you rely on them.

The Dallas County protest calendar
WhenWhat happens
January 1Value is set as of this date for the year
AprilDCAD mails Notices of Appraised Value
April 30General deadline to file exemptions
May 15Protest deadline, or 30 days after your notice, whichever is later
Spring to fallProtest season, we work your case to a result
January 31Property tax bill due

Dates shift slightly year to year and if a deadline lands on a weekend or holiday. Confirm your exact date on your notice or with DCAD.

Timing

The deadline is the part you can't get back.

The Dallas County protest deadline is May 15, or 30 days after the district delivers your notice, whichever is later. Miss it, and your value for the year is generally locked in, along with the bill that follows in January.

Send us your notice as soon as it arrives in April. The earlier we have it, the more room we have to do the job right instead of racing the clock.

What we do

We take the Dallas County protest off your plate

We file it

Send us your notice and we file the protest with DCAD before the deadline. You sign one form and that is the last thing we need.

We argue it

We take on the district and represent you all the way through the review board. You do not attend anything.

You save

If your value comes down, our fee is one third of the saving. If it does not, you owe nothing. There is no minimum fee.

Across the county

We protest property throughout Dallas County

  • Dallas
  • Irving
  • Garland
  • Mesquite
  • Grand Prairie
  • Richardson
  • Carrollton
  • Rowlett
  • DeSoto
  • Lancaster
  • Cedar Hill
  • Duncanville

Not listed, or just outside the county line? It does not matter. We file in every appraisal district in Texas, so send us the property either way.

Questions

Dallas County property tax questions

Will protesting raise my appraisal?

No. Under Texas Tax Code §41.47(b), the review board can't set your value higher than the amount already on your notice as a result of your protest. It comes down, or it stays the same.

When is the Dallas deadline?

May 15, or 30 days after DCAD delivers your notice, whichever is later. Notices typically go out in April.

What does it cost?

One third of what we save you. No minimum fee, no filing fee, no per parcel charge. If we don't win a reduction, you pay nothing.

Do I have to go to the hearing?

No. We represent you at DCAD and before the review board, so you don't need to take time off or appear.

See what you could save in Dallas County.

Send us your appraisal notice and find out what a protest could do for you. The review is free, and you're under no obligation.

Start my free review