Over-assessed vs. comparables

620 N State

Lindon · Utah County, Utah · commercial property · 2,852 sq ft · Utah Code §59-2-1004

$4,180estimated overpaid in property tax / year

This property's assessment sits above the comparable basis its tax bill should follow — a strong opening for an appeal.

What the public records show

Utah public rollUtah
Current assessment$1,201,200
What the comparable assessments support$821,210
Estimated over-assessment$379,990 · 31.6%
Comparable basis$288/SF
Estimated tax saved / year$4,180

Straight from the public Utah roll. The estimated saving applies an estimated composite millage to the over-assessment. We adjust comparables for size, age, and location before we say a word about your property — and we never name owners.

The comparable basis

The 8 comparable assessments behind the number

Each comparable is adjusted toward this property for size and age, then we take the median. Owners are never named — only the public assessment figures matter.

Comparable assessment $/SFAdjusted $/SFSizeBuilt
$89$903,293 SF1996
$95$912,586 SF1990
$130$1272,422 SF1996
$175$1692,510 SF1993
$204$2123,793 SF1998
$364$3643,611 SF1992
$370$3752,362 SF2003
$435$4442,432 SF2004

Why this is the lever

Utah Code §59-2-1004

Under §59-2-1004, a property owner may appeal the equalization of an assessment. Because Utah is a non-disclosure state, the assessor's own comparable assessed values are the evidence: when an assessment materially exceeds comparable assessed values, the Board of Equalization can equalize it down to match.

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