🏡 Most homeowners overpay on property taxes every year.
Not because they have to. Because no one tells them their assessment is wrong.
We fight it for you. See if you’re overpaying 👇 https://t.co/OpApIow631
June is National Homeownership Month 🥳.
Funny timing, since owning a home has rarely felt this expensive. Insurance, repairs, taxes all climbing at once.
You can't fix all of it. But an overassessed tax bill? That one's worth a look.
See how much you could save: https://t.co/4HtUqHkHCM
North Carolina homeowners are getting hit again. A second 7.5% insurance rate increase lands June 1, 2026.
The bills keep climbing, but your property tax assessment doesn't have to go unchecked. That part you can actually push back on.
Easy to find out: https://t.co/P5ZqWgrcDi
Florida voters will decide this November whether to expand the homestead exemption, which could mean a bigger break on property taxes for a lot of homeowners.
It is a good reminder that exemptions are one thing, but your assessed value is another. Even with a generous exemption, an inflated assessment can quietly cost you every single year.
If you are not sure your home is assessed fairly, it takes a minute to find out. See for yourself below 👇https://t.co/4HtUqHkHCM
If you own a home in Florida, this week's property tax news actually affects your bill.
Here's the real breakdown: what's on the table, who it helps, and the one move to make before you count on it. 🧵
The move: don't wait on a November ballot measure to stop overpaying on a bill that's due now.
Whatever happens, you can challenge an inflated assessment today.
Own in Florida? Curious if you're overpaying? Drop a comment or check below 👇
Up to 60% of homes are over-assessed on property taxes.
Fewer than 5% of homeowners ever appeal.
That gap is money the county keeps because you didn’t ask for it back.
(Source: National Taxpayers Union)
I'm all about ROI.
Today @getmadecard announces our partnership with @AbodeMoney to help our cardholders with the single highest ROI ongoing "maintenance" investment they can make: property tax appeals.