Isn't the rate set by each municipality? Can't you just look up the rates in each jurisdiction?
View Poll Results: How much property tax do u pay relative to your current property value?
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Mar 27th, 2005 10:56 AM #1
Poll on property tax, Plz Participate
Doing an econ researchish (ok it's only a 2nd yr econ course) assignment.
Need to find out how much property tax you guys pay relative to the current market value of your house (if u don't know the exact price, a guestimate is accepted).
Anyway, plz participate in the poll so I can back up the crap I'm presenting. Thanks pplz.
How to calculate?? use the amount u paid in property tax / (market value of your house)
EDIT
ok, for those of u listed 1.3 or greater, if u can plz reply with exact percentage, it'll be appreciated.
how it's assessed??
http://ottawa.ca/city_services/propt...ments_en.shtmlLast edited by JoKeRr; Mar 27th, 2005 at 03:12 PM.
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Mar 27th, 2005 01:55 PM #2Sr. Member



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Mar 27th, 2005 01:57 PM #3
How do you define your current property value?
What the municipality thinks the value is?
What the real estate market thinks the value is?
What you think the value is?
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Mar 27th, 2005 02:00 PM #4it's not fixed, cause there're many thing to be taken into consideration (such as location etc), so each property is actually evaluated individually, after compare with the properties sold within the same neighborhood. and it's done annually.
Originally Posted by MasterAvatar
For example:
the girl next door sold her house for 250,000, and your house has the same sized backyard, same # of bathrooms and grarges, but you have 2 extra bedroom. and say her property tax is 2500 this yr, since yours have more bedrooms, even though it wasn't for sale, but in comparison to the girl next door's house, yours will be evaluated at 2500+addition tax on the 2 xtra bedroom etc.
hope that clears some confusions.Last edited by JoKeRr; Mar 27th, 2005 at 02:05 PM.
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Mar 27th, 2005 02:03 PM #5Deal Addict




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In london the whole city has a set rate, and location and other conisderations are taken into account in the value of the house that they establish
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Mar 27th, 2005 02:13 PM #6The rate is fixed by each municipality. It is called mill rate. It uses the estimation of your property value times mill rate to calculate your property tax.
Originally Posted by JoKeRr
If the girl next door sold her house for $250,000 and your house is exactly the same + 2 extra bedroom, it will NOT raise your property tax right the way because I believe the property value is calculated by the province every 2 years. At that time, the adjuster will use all the factors to get the property value of your property. The $250K value of the house next door sold last year is just one factor. The $300K value of the house sold next street this year is another factor. If the adjuster knows about that 2 bedrooms, it is another factor.
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Mar 27th, 2005 02:14 PM #7
I don't get property tax. If someone own a piece of land/house and paid tax when s/he bought it, why pay more tax each year? Does the tax cover something like utilities and etc? But those are seperate bills.
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Mar 27th, 2005 02:17 PM #8When you buy the house, the tax you paid did not go to municipality government. Even if there is, it is only a portion of it.
Originally Posted by manixc
Property tax is more or less the only (big enough) source of income of your municipality government. Your municipality government needs to pay to build and fix the road, the parks, the libraries, the community center, the staff, ..... and the list goes on.
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Mar 27th, 2005 02:20 PM #9Deal Guru




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Mar 27th, 2005 02:20 PM #10
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Mar 27th, 2005 02:20 PM #11You pay the property tax indirectly. The property tax expense is factored in your rent.
Originally Posted by hagbard
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Mar 27th, 2005 02:50 PM #12Sr. Member



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It's the province that assesses the value of the property. You take that value and multiply it by the rate set by the city to arrive at the property tax. The difference in the tax between the two properties in your example is because of the difference in the assessments of the value of the two properties, not because the rate is different.
Originally Posted by JoKeRr
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Mar 27th, 2005 02:52 PM #13I'm assuming you want market value and not assessed value. My place is worth 25% more than it's assessed value which is used to calculate my property taxes.
Originally Posted by JoKeRr
If you go with my market value, I pay 1.31%.
If you go with assessed value, I pay 1.63%
I think there was something in the news a while back that we have among the highest, if not the highest, property taxes in the country.
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Mar 27th, 2005 03:12 PM #14yes market value.
Originally Posted by Chookman
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Mar 27th, 2005 03:39 PM #15oh thanks that make sense. but what about income tax? Those probably to straight to federal and provinical gov huh?
Originally Posted by gman
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