We help you fight your
property taxes with AI.

If similar homes nearby are valued lower than yours, you're overpaying on property taxes. We find the proof and build your protest case — in minutes.

Step 1
Look up your property
Enter your address and see your appraised value, exemptions, and year-over-year changes.
Step 2
We find the comps
Our AI searches thousands of El Paso properties to find similar homes appraised lower than yours.
Step 3
Download your report
Get a print-ready PDF with comps, savings estimate, and what to say at your hearing.
Bonus
Built-in intelligence
Ask our AI about zip code trends, value history, neighborhood comparisons, and more.
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Preview: see how it works
Ask about any El Paso property...
Property Tax Protest Timeline
Mar–Apr
2026 values released
You are here
NOW
Prepare your case
!
May 15
Deadline to file
Jun–Jul
Attend hearing
Oct–Nov
Taxes due

What are property taxes?

Every year, the El Paso Central Appraisal District assigns an appraised value to your home — their estimate of what it's worth. Your property tax bill is based on that number.

What you're paying now
Your Appraised Value
$245,000
×
Tax Rate
2.5%
=
Your Tax Bill
$6,125/yr
After a successful protest
Reduced Value
$203,000
×
Tax Rate
2.5%
=
Your Tax Bill
$5,075/yr
You save
$1,050/year
That's $87.50 back in your pocket every month

Why should you protest?

Most El Paso homeowners don't realize they're overpaying on their property taxes. Here's why protesting matters.

$1,400/yr
It's your money
That's what the average El Paso homeowner overpays in property taxes each year. That's about $117 per month that should stay in your pocket.
94%
Most people don't do it
of El Paso homeowners never protest. They accept whatever the Appraisal District assigns, even when it's wrong. Don't be one of them.
May 15
There's a deadline
You must file your protest by May 15, 2026. After that, you're locked into this year's value. Don't wait.

How to protest?

From start to finish. We've highlighted where we do the heavy lifting.

Get your appraisal notice
The El Paso Central Appraisal District mails your 2026 Notice of Appraised Value around March–April. This is the number they think your home is worth.
2
Research comparable homes We do this for you
Find nearby homes similar to yours that are appraised lower. This is the strongest evidence for your protest.
3
Build your protest case We do this for you
Organize your evidence into a clear, professional report with the data the review board needs to see.
4
File your protest before May 15
Submit online at the Appraisal District’s website or by mail. Our report tells you exactly what to write.
5
Attend your hearing
The Appraisal District will send you a hearing date, usually 2–4 weeks later. Be attentive of their email communication. Show up with your report and present your case.
6
Get your result
The board reviews your evidence and decides on the spot. Most homeowners who show up with data get a reduction.

Simple, transparent pricing

Free to explore. Buy credits when you're ready for the full analysis.

Looking up your property is always free. You can see your appraised value, exemption status, and history without paying anything. When you're ready to see comparable homes, savings estimates, and a protest-ready PDF, you'll need a credit. Each credit unlocks one property for full analysis. Buy the package that fits your needs.

Homeowner

Perfect for your home + a neighbor

  • Complete comp table & map
  • Equity analysis
  • Protest letter PDF

Pro

For most homeowners

  • Everything in Homeowner
  • Great for multiple properties
  • AI chat analysis

Investor

For agents and portfolio owners

  • Everything in Pro
  • Portfolio-level analysis
  • Priority support
Contact Us

Enterprise

Need more than 20 properties? Let's build a custom plan.

  • Custom credit volume
  • Dedicated support
  • Bulk pricing
Have a promo code? You can apply it at checkout.
Credits expire December 31, 2026. All sales are final.

Frequently asked questions

Every year, the El Paso Central Appraisal District assigns an appraised value to your home. If you think it’s too high, you have the legal right to protest. You present evidence (like comparable homes valued lower) to an appraisal review board, and they may reduce your value — which lowers your tax bill.

It depends on how over-appraised your home is. The average El Paso homeowner who protests saves about $1,400/year. Some save more, some less. Our free property lookup shows you immediately whether you have a strong case.

May 15, 2026 (or 30 days after you receive your appraisal notice, whichever is later). After this date, you cannot protest your 2026 appraised value.

All data comes from the El Paso Central Appraisal District — the same official source the appraisal review board uses.

One credit unlocks one property address for full comparable analysis and unlimited report generation. Free features like property lookups and value history never consume credits.

There’s no penalty for protesting. If the board doesn’t reduce your value, your taxes stay the same — you don’t owe anything extra. There’s no downside to trying.

Yes! In fact, you should. Property values change annually, and last year’s protest doesn’t carry over. We recommend protesting every year to make sure you’re not overpaying.

Yes. We never share or sell your personal data. Your property lookups, reports, and account information are kept strictly confidential. The property data itself is public record from the El Paso Central Appraisal District — we just make it easier to use.

Get in touch

Have questions, need a custom plan, or just want to say hi? Reach out and we'll get back to you.

contact@chucopropertytaxes.com

Don't leave money on the table.

The deadline is May 15. Start now.

Look Up My Property