Property Tax Info

Plain-language explainers on how property tax works, grounded in official government sources — every figure below links to where it comes from. Pick a topic, then a state, then (where rules are also set locally) a county. Coverage starts with Texas / Travis County and is structured to grow as Parcelytics covers more states and counties.

Topics

Homestead Exemptions

Homestead rules are set partly by state law and partly by each local taxing unit — so this page has a state-level section that applies everywhere in Texas, and a county-level section for how Travis County's own taxing units have chosen to apply it. Only Texas / Travis County are built out today; more states will show here as Parcelytics expands.

Texas — general rules (state law)

Texas school districts are required to exempt $140,000 of a home's appraised value from the taxes they collect (Tax Code §11.13(b)). This exemption is mandatory — every school district in Texas grants it automatically to a qualifying homestead; it isn't something a district can opt out of.

Beyond that mandatory school exemption, any other taxing unit — a county, city, hospital district, or other special district — may separately choose to adopt its own local-option homestead exemption of up to 20% of a home's appraised value, with a minimum exemption of $5,000 if it adopts one at all (Tax Code §11.13(n)). This part is optional: not every taxing unit offers it, and where they do, the percentage can vary by entity.

To qualify for the general homestead exemption, you must own the property and use it as your principal residence as of January 1 of the tax year. You can only claim one homestead exemption at a time, and only in Texas — you cannot claim a homestead exemption on a Texas property while also claiming one on a residence anywhere else, in or out of state.

Separate, additional exemptions exist for homeowners 65+, disabled homeowners, and disabled veterans — not covered on this page yet.

More counties as Parcelytics expands coverage.
Travis County — how local taxing units apply it

Travis County itself has adopted the maximum local-option exemption allowed by law: 20% of a home's appraised value (minimum $5,000).

Two other major Travis County taxing entities have separately adopted their own 20% local-option exemptions: the City of Austin and Central Health (the Travis County Healthcare District). Travis Central Appraisal District's own entity-level exemption records confirm City of Austin and Travis County both at 20% with a $5,000 minimum; Central Health's Board of Managers has adopted 20% — "the maximum allowable by state law" — in its own taxpayer impact filings. (Central Health's 20% figure is based on their most recently available public filing we located — fiscal year 2022 — not independently reconfirmed since. City of Austin and Travis County's figures above come from Travis Central Appraisal District's 2025 filing, current for this tax year.)

Because each taxing unit's exemption applies only to that unit's own share of your bill, a homestead exemption doesn't reduce every line of your tax bill by the same amount. It reduces each entity's portion by whatever that specific entity has adopted — the mandatory $140,000 for your school district, up to 20% for the county / city / health district, and often $0 for entities that haven't adopted a local-option exemption at all, such as most water and municipal utility districts.

Travis County also grants an additional $143,220 exemption, on top of its 20%, for homesteads of owners who are 65 or older or disabled. That additional exemption is specific to age/disability status and isn't modeled elsewhere on Parcelytics yet.