Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Delaware also does not adjust
Which seems nuts, because of one day progressives take over and complain about equity, they could decide to reassess everything so that the tax base for property taxes would be modernized to make sure 'people pay their fair share'. It seems like a massive risk to move to states or areas where they don't constantly update their assessments. Assuming assessments will never go up is a gigantic gamble. One day you could wake up to a tax bill that quadruples due to some progressive pols getting aggressive. Your low tax bill is entirely predicated on politics never changing.
This is only an issue for people buying expensive homes, or who are lucky enough to buy a home that massively appreciates. Most people own homes worth way less so even if their tax bill triples or quadruples, their current taxes are so low that it would not even matter that much.
Also higher taxes are tied directly to city services. If your tax bill is going up to pay for the fantastic schools or great parks and amenities, well-- how else can they pay for those.
I am not going to sit around worrying about the possibility that my 500k house in a great area with wonderful schools might double in value and then "of no!" I'll gain a half million in equity in a place where it will be easy to sell because it's appealing to live there, and have to pay a tax my fraction of that equity in property taxes.
Not true at all.
$6k tax bill on this $460k home:
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1406-Greywall-Ln-Wynnewood-PA-19096/9956995_zpid/
That’s only because the home is assessed at $153k. Are you really going to say with a straight face that if one day politics changes and they update that home assessment to be taxed at the current value of $460k that a tax bill going from $6k to potentially north of $18,000 wouldn’t sting or matter much to that owner?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Delaware also does not adjust
Which seems nuts, because of one day progressives take over and complain about equity, they could decide to reassess everything so that the tax base for property taxes would be modernized to make sure 'people pay their fair share'. It seems like a massive risk to move to states or areas where they don't constantly update their assessments. Assuming assessments will never go up is a gigantic gamble. One day you could wake up to a tax bill that quadruples due to some progressive pols getting aggressive. Your low tax bill is entirely predicated on politics never changing.
This is only an issue for people buying expensive homes, or who are lucky enough to buy a home that massively appreciates. Most people own homes worth way less so even if their tax bill triples or quadruples, their current taxes are so low that it would not even matter that much.
Also higher taxes are tied directly to city services. If your tax bill is going up to pay for the fantastic schools or great parks and amenities, well-- how else can they pay for those.
I am not going to sit around worrying about the possibility that my 500k house in a great area with wonderful schools might double in value and then "of no!" I'll gain a half million in equity in a place where it will be easy to sell because it's appealing to live there, and have to pay a tax my fraction of that equity in property taxes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Delaware also does not adjust
Which seems nuts, because of one day progressives take over and complain about equity, they could decide to reassess everything so that the tax base for property taxes would be modernized to make sure 'people pay their fair share'. It seems like a massive risk to move to states or areas where they don't constantly update their assessments. Assuming assessments will never go up is a gigantic gamble. One day you could wake up to a tax bill that quadruples due to some progressive pols getting aggressive. Your low tax bill is entirely predicated on politics never changing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Delaware also does not adjust
Which seems nuts, because of one day progressives take over and complain about equity, they could decide to reassess everything so that the tax base for property taxes would be modernized to make sure 'people pay their fair share'. It seems like a massive risk to move to states or areas where they don't constantly update their assessments. Assuming assessments will never go up is a gigantic gamble. One day you could wake up to a tax bill that quadruples due to some progressive pols getting aggressive. Your low tax bill is entirely predicated on politics never changing.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think there's a statewide tax policy. Property taxes are dictated by the local town/township, which can and do vary widely. Some Philadelphia suburbs have low taxes, others have much higher taxes and corresponding lower housing prices. Main Line has fairly low property taxes. Philadelphia has lowish property taxes but the wage tax more than makes up for it.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think there's a statewide tax policy. Property taxes are dictated by the local town/township, which can and do vary widely. Some Philadelphia suburbs have low taxes, others have much higher taxes and corresponding lower housing prices. Main Line has fairly low property taxes. Philadelphia has lowish property taxes but the wage tax more than makes up for it.
Anonymous wrote:Delaware also does not adjust
Anonymous wrote:My parents live in PA, and (at least where they live) property assessments are only updated when the house is sold. So when you buy a house, you will pay way more than the previous owners who lived there for a long time, and much more than your neighbors in similar homes who have lived there for years. But in ten years, you’ll still be paying based on that assessment, and your new neighbor who buys in 2034 will pay much more than you.
Anonymous wrote:I haven’t studied PA property tax. But our families all live there and all pay far more than us for properties that are valued at 25-40% of ours. It’s a heavily taxed area.