Cochran County Courthouse in Morton, Texas

Property Tax Resources ยท Cochran County, Texas

Cochran County
Property Taxes

Deep in the South Plains near the New Mexico line โ€” where cotton fields, agricultural land, and a small-town economy mean every tax dollar counts for Cochran County landowners.

Approx.
2,500
Residents
BRB FY2025
None
County Bond Debt
FY2025
$0
Debt Per Resident
 
Ag-Heavy
Primary Land Use

Source: County debt — Texas Bond Review Board, FY2025 (no outstanding county bond debt reported).

๐Ÿ”ด 2026 Protest Deadline: May 15, 2026 โ€” or 30 days after your Notice of Appraised Value is mailed, whichever is later. Miss this date and you waive your right to protest.

Cochran County sits at the far western edge of the Texas South Plains, bordered by New Mexico to the west and Hockley, Yoakum, and Bailey counties in Texas. Morton is the county seat. The county’s economy runs almost entirely on agriculture โ€” cotton and grain sorghum dominate, with some feedlot operations โ€” making agricultural productivity valuation a central concern for most landowners here. If your land qualifies for ag-use appraisal, your taxable value should reflect productivity rather than market value, and it’s worth verifying that status annually with the appraisal district.

Cochran Central Appraisal District handles all property in the county from its office in Morton. The district is small and handles a relatively modest number of accounts, which means individual attention to your protest is realistic. With just one primary school district and a handful of special districts setting rates, the combined burden falls squarely on a small tax base โ€” making accurate appraisals more important, not less, in a county this size.

Free Protest Guide
You can protest your property taxes yourself โ€” and most who do win.
Step-by-step filing instructions, deadlines, and evidence tips for your Texas protest.
Read the Guide โ†’

Cochran County Resources

Cochran Central Appraisal District

Official CAD site โ€” appraisal notices, exemption applications, and district contact information.

Property Look-Up

Search your property record, view current appraised value, and verify exemption and ag-use status.

File Your Protest

Cochran CAD accepts protest filings through the district office. Contact them at 806-266-5584 for procedures and forms.

Truth in Taxation

Every taxing entity’s proposed rate, adopted rate, and public hearing schedule for Cochran County.

๐Ÿ“… Protest Deadline Calculator

Enter the date your Notice of Appraised Value was mailed to find your exact filing deadline.

Your protest deadline is:
Cochran County Courthouse, Morton, Texas

Truth in Taxation

Texas law requires every taxing entity to publish its proposed and adopted tax rates publicly before they take effect. In Cochran County, that means the county, Morton ISD, the city of Morton, and special districts must all post their rate notices and hold public hearings before raising rates above the no-new-revenue threshold.

You have the right to attend those hearings and speak โ€” or to simply show up and be counted. Most residents never do, which is exactly why rates drift higher over time.

View All Cochran County Rates โ†’

Courthouse photo: Wikimedia Commons

2024 Cochran County Taxing Entities

Approximate 2024 adopted rates per $100 assessed value. Verify current rates at countytaxrates.com.

Taxing EntityTypeRate (2025 adopted)
Cochran CountyCounty$0.8000/$100
Morton ISDSchool District$0.6822/$100
Sudan ISDSchool District$0.7925/$100
Whiteface CISDSchool District$0.6822/$100

2025 adopted rates per Texas Comptroller Tax Rates & Levies (source). City, MUD, college and other special-district rates may also apply depending on your parcel. Your total depends on which districts your property falls in โ€” verify current rates at your county appraisal district.

Free Help Protesting your Cochran County appraisal is free โ€” file directly with your county appraisal district.
How to Protest โ†’

How to Protest Your Cochran County Appraisal

1

Check Your Notice

Your Notice of Appraised Value from Cochran CAD shows your assessed value. Review it the day it arrives โ€” the clock starts then.

2

Look Up Your Record

Search esearch.cochrancad.com for your parcel. Verify ag-use status, exemptions, and square footage or acreage for errors.

3

Gather Evidence

Comparable sales, appraisals, ag lease rates, and repair estimates all make valid evidence. Rural comparables may be limited โ€” use what’s available in the county.

4

Try Informal Resolution

Before your ARB hearing, a CAD appraiser may offer to settle. Review any offer carefully before accepting.

5

Present to the ARB

The Appraisal Review Board is independent of the CAD. Present your evidence clearly. Most hearings run 15โ€“30 minutes.

6

Appeal If Needed

Disagree with the ARB ruling? You may appeal to district court, binding arbitration, or SOAH (properties over $1 million).

“No person’s particular services shall be demanded, nor property taken or applied to public use, unless by the consent of himself or his representative, without just compensation being made therefor.”

โ€” Section 13, Declaration of Rights, Republic of Texas, 1836

Cochran County farmers and landowners have worked some of the hardest, flattest ground in Texas for generations โ€” pulling cotton and grain from the High Plains through drought and market swings alike. The appraisal district’s job is to value what you own accurately and fairly. When their numbers run high without justification, you have both the statutory right and the founding-era moral authority to push back. Look up your value. Verify your ag-use status. File your protest. In a county this small, every voice at the ARB table carries real weight.

How to Protest Your Taxes โ†’ Find Another County โ†’
Do It Yourself
Handle your Cochran County protest yourself.
Most Texas homeowners who protest get a reduction. Use the appraisal-district links above and our free guide to file, present your evidence, and appeal โ€” no fee, no middleman.
Read the Protest Guide โ†’

For informational and educational purposes only. Property-Taxes-Texas.com is a citizen advocacy and education resource. Nothing on this site constitutes legal, financial, tax, or appraisal advice. We are not attorneys, CPAs, or licensed appraisers. Consult a licensed Texas attorney, qualified financial advisor, or certified appraiser for guidance specific to your situation. Deadlines, rates, and statutes are subject to change — verify all details with your county appraisal district or the Texas Comptroller before acting.

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