Every few years in Guilford County, like clockwork, the reassessment notices go out — and a lot of property owners have the same reaction: There’s no way my property is worth that.
What follows is a quiet but very real surge in activity that most people don’t see – appeals filed, evidence gathered, hearings scheduled, and homeowners and business owners trying to make their case that the county got it wrong.
And here’s the thing: sometimes they do.
The good news is that a property tax appeal in North Carolina isn’t some mysterious insider process reserved for attorneys and appraisers. Regular people win some of these appeals every year. However, they don’t win by complaining about taxes being too high. They win by showing that the value is wrong.
There’s a difference — and it’s everything.
In North Carolina, including Guilford County, the process starts with an informal review through the county’s tax office.
If that doesn’t resolve it, the appeal can go to the county’s Board of Equalization and Review, and beyond that to the state’s Property Tax Commission in Raleigh.
At every stage of the process, the burden is on the property owner to show that the county’s number isn’t supported by the facts.
There are three ways people tend to win.
The first is by knocking out a bad sale that the county relied on. Sometimes assessors use a recent sale to support a value – however, not all sales are created equal. If the property was transferred between family members, sold under pressure in a foreclosure or short sale, bundled into a larger deal, or included personal property like furniture or equipment, then it might not reflect true market value. If you can show that the sale wasn’t arm’s length, you’ve taken away one of the county’s key supports.
The second is proving that the condition of the property is worse than the county is assuming. Mass appraisal system participants don’t walk through your house. They don’t see the roof that needs replacing, the HVAC system on its last leg, or the water damage in the crawlspace. But a buyer would – and a buyer would lower their offer accordingly. That’s where photos, contractor estimates, and inspection reports come in. Vague claims that a property “needs work” don’t carry much weight. But documentation does.
The third is identifying errors in the county’s own records or valuation model. Sometimes the county has the wrong square footage, lists finished space that isn’t actually finished, assigns the wrong effective age or applies land values that don’t match the neighborhood. These aren’t dramatic mistakes – but they can add up. And once you start pointing them out, the valuation can begin to look less reliable.
What matters in all of this is hard evidence: Dated photos. Written contractor estimates. Comparable sales that actually resemble the property in question — not cherry-picked high-end examples, but realistic comps that reflect similar condition and use. Copies of deeds and settlement statements. Screenshots of the county property card with errors highlighted.
This isn’t about bringing a stack of paper and hoping something sticks. It’s about building a clear, simple case that the number on the notice doesn’t line up with reality.
It also helps to keep expectations in check. The goal isn’t to prove a perfect value down to the dollar. The goal is to show that the county’s number is off enough that it shouldn’t stand.
And it’s important to stay focused on that. Arguing that taxes are too high won’t get very far. The Board of Equalization and Review isn’t there to set tax rates – it’s there only to determine value. If the value goes down, the tax bill follows. If it doesn’t, the rate discussion is happening somewhere else entirely.
There are also some common pitfalls. Relying on Zillow instead of actual sales data. Bringing too many comps instead of a few strong ones. Making broad claims without documentation. Or simply missing the deadline to file an appeal, which ends the conversation before it starts.
For Guilford County property owners, the first step is straightforward. Pull up your property record, look at what the county says about your home or business, and start checking it against reality. If something doesn’t match, that’s where the process begins.
Listen, the county’s revaluation system isn’t perfect – and it’s not really designed to be. It’s a mass appraisal process trying to value thousands of properties all at once. That works reasonably well overall, but it inevitably produces outliers and the onus is on the property owner to let the Tax Department know if they got it wrong.

Alston Realty Group will definitely win on this one.
mark spain and skippy two peas in a pod i tell ya. those cuniving litle rascals… spain handles the real estate angle bying up the ‘lily white” areas while skippy plays the political games. what a big joke. ten years time this city will be named Skipsylvania i tell ya. if we dont vote in new people to change things i might just have to packup and leave for Florida. got some old buddys out in port st lucie
For example, nearly 40% of residents receive Medicaid benefits (health care for indigents). Freeloaders flock here because of all the free stuff, and permissiveness.
As our local govt continues feathering their nest, folks continue vote for more free stuff. Govt schools indoctrinate good little consumers, so the fact that is not free does not register.
The great conservative lie. Freeloaders come to American for health benefits? LMAO. You do know all other developed countries provide government healthcare to EVERYONE?
Considering that children make up over a third of those enrolled in Medicaid, are you suggesting they should get jobs to avoid being freeloaders?
Also note that 64% of working aged adults on Medicaid HAVE JOBS…..just not jobs that pay a living wage such as Walmart and Amazon.
But go ahead and drink the Kool-Aid of your conservative propaganda masters.
Cheers.
yes! we need a return to youth employment. kids actually learned high quality values back in those days and we need to find that again.
Can’t think of anything more conservative than the idea of child labor being force on low-income communities as if they don’t have enough issues.
well technically i would think the Most Conservative Thing would be not doing anything, since thats what conservatism means. maintaining the status quo
This factual information is something that should have been shared weeks, nay, months ago. People need to learn to use logic and reason rather than emotion to support their debate points. Whether attempting to share your medical issues with your doctor, your political differences with a friend, the reasons you’re the best choice as a future employee, or why your choice of a Mongolian restaurant is better than Chuck-e-Cheese, having three or four solid, provable points is likely to sway those deciding in your favor. (This worked for me once in front of a Social Security judge. He asked me one question about my work history, looked at my documentation, and said, “If this young lady could work, I believe she’d be working,” mumbled something I didn’t catch, then got up and left. After we got outside, my husband said, “He ruled in your favor.” The lawyer helping told me the judge had never done that before. She’d complimented me on how organized my paperwork was.) Get your stuff together.
On a side note. Well, folks, a letter will cost you 5c more in July. We get a couple of these things most every year. Yet the USPS is bleeding money every day, and is being reduced to a skeleton “service”. I slipped over to West Market St. station, 5600 block, to pick up a couple rolls of forever stamps. I walked in about 3PM, there were 13 people in line ahead of me. ONE clerk at her station. Three other stations were vacant. The trash cans in the foyer were overflowed onto the floor, the entire floor was dirty. I walked around back to the loading dock to see what was (not) going on. No answer. So that means there was just one person in the branch, or that another was hiding in the back room. They don’t open until 9AM (used to be 7:30), and just one of several drops boxes are outside. The others were removed. Go figure.
The new Postmaster General is even worse than the one we had before.
You can buy forever stamp rolls at Costco & other retailers. Woe unto you if you have to mail a package. So, it’s UPS stations around town now. Our govt (in)action.
Hopefully the postal service will be privatized soon and the government will be out. This should have happened years ago. Let private enterprise take over.
At one time, postal services was a critical public service but with digital technology and paperless services, it really is time to let this go as a public service given the range of other private services available. I maybe check my mailbox once or twice a week at most.
Do not make me laugh sarcastically!
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In this vein, it was my pleasure today to meet with the revaluation assessor for my part of the County. Danielle was good natured, helpful, but firm. In the end we reached a number for my house that we could both live with.
She listened to my argument attentively and courteously, and understood the points I was making. And she made some accommodation for what I had brought to her attention. Thank you, Danielle.
This really was excellent customer service, or rather, citizen service. There’s only so much they can do, and I understand that, but between her and “Sammy” the experience was less painful than I expected.
And I received a more accurate assessment of the value of my house.
Hats off to the Guilford County Tax Department ! And that’s something I never thought I’d hear myself say.
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you would make a great politician not just with your good ideals but also your prose. this comment is written just like i would imagine a politician would speak about their endorsement of a fellow candidate. you speak their language well but i know you are also capable of speaking straight to the voters without any nonsensical illustrious void-language as you do in most of your other comments
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pants off to austin morris because he’s a charmer ! will begging for a high assessed value improve my ability to ask & get a higher sale price ?
I say everyone pay monthly on their taxes. As long as you are paying they can’t say anything. Many people can’t fork over $6000 plus dollars at once.
trade your local ‘labor’ for taxes owed ? join a ‘fire’ crew eg. teach watch dig pave mow etc
Many? How about most? Young people, families, & seniors for openers.
FL wants to eliminate property taxes for homeowners. See what happens.
1. You must be a registered Democrat.
2. You must be a Progressive in your politics.
3. You must be a supporter and/or related to Skip Alston or Nancy Vaughn.
4. You must have an income which exceeds $300,000 so that bribe money will not be missed.
5. Being a citizen is not a necessary requirement.
Meet all of these and perhaps your property tax will be considered for reevaluation.
we live in the 1984. we have to bow down to the party or else. literal discrimination while they tell us otherwise!!
they used ‘1984’ as a guide ? orwell CAUSED this !
Looks like an amendment is coming out if the NC house that would cap property tax increases to a certain amount based on revenue collected. Trouble is it would be voted on in November. Too late for what is coming from the Guilford commissioners in June. Maybe if that action exceeds the limits set by new legislation maybe there may be some recourse for local government pushing increases through before the amendment is enacted.