Hamilton County Courthouse in Hamilton, Texas

Property Tax Resources · Hamilton County, Texas

Hamilton County
Property Taxes

Central Texas hill country at the edge of the Lampasas Cut Plain — Hamilton County’s 1.26% effective rate falls on ranching and agricultural land where values have risen with Hill Country spillover demand.

APPROX.
8,500
Residents
APPROX.
1.26%
Effective Tax Rate
APPROX.
$1,363
Avg Annual Tax Bill
 
51%
Protest Success Rate (2024)

Sources: Population — U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2024 estimates; Effective Tax Rate & Avg Annual Bill — Ownwell (2024); Protest Success Rate — Texas Comptroller PTAD data, approximate.

🔴 2026 Protest Deadline: May 15, 2026 — or 30 days after your Notice of Appraised Value is mailed, whichever is later. Miss this date and you waive your right to protest.

Hamilton County lies at the northern edge of the Texas Hill Country, where the Lampasas Cut Plain meets cedar-juniper rangeland and small-town agricultural life. Hamilton is the county seat for a county whose economy runs on cattle, goats, and grain farming. The county sits within commuting distance of Killeen-Temple and Waco — proximity that has introduced some non-agricultural demand into a traditionally rural land market.

At 1.26%, Hamilton County’s effective rate exceeds the national median. For ranchers and agricultural landowners, keeping productivity valuations current is essential — Hill Country spillover demand can inflate comparable sales in ways that push agricultural land values well above what the land produces. Half of those who protested in 2024 achieved reductions. Your deadline is May 15, 2026.


Property Tax Protest Service
Don’t want to fight this alone? Let Ownwell do it.
Ownwell protests Texas property taxes on contingency — you pay nothing unless they reduce your bill.

Get a Free Analysis →

Hamilton County Resources

Hamilton County Appraisal District

Official CAD site — appraisal notices, exemption applications, and district contact information.


Property Look-Up

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


File Your Protest

Hamilton County Appraisal District protest procedures, online filing portal, and deadline information for the current year.


Truth in Taxation

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

📅 Protest Deadline Calculator

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

Your protest deadline is:

Hamilton County Courthouse, Hamilton, Texas

Truth in Taxation — Your Right to Be Heard

Every taxing unit in Hamilton County — your school district, city, county — must publish its proposed rate and hold a public hearing before adopting any rate exceeding the no-new-revenue rate. These meetings are open. Your voice is on the record.

View Hamilton County Tax Rates →

Who Taxes Hamilton County Property Owners

Taxing Entity Type Rate (2024 approx.)
Hamilton County County ~$0.46/$100
Hamilton ISD School District ~$0.88/$100
Evant ISD School District ~$0.85/$100
City of Hamilton City ~$0.32/$100
Multiple Special Districts Special District Varies

Rates shown are approximate 2024 adopted rates. Verify current rates at hamilton.countytaxrates.com.

SponsoredOwnwell handles your Hamilton County protest — evidence, filing, and hearings — on contingency.

No Win, No Fee →

How to Protest Your Hamilton County Property Taxes

1

Look Up Your Value

Search your account at hamiltoncad.org. Know your Notice of Appraised Value and the deadline printed on it.

2

File Your Protest

File online, by mail, or in person at Hamilton County Appraisal District: P.O. Box 819, Hamilton, TX 76531. Deadline: May 15, 2026 or 30 days after your notice was mailed.

3

Gather Your Evidence

Recent sales of comparable properties, your purchase price, photos of condition issues, and repair estimates all strengthen your case.

4

Try Informal Resolution

Before your ARB hearing, a CAD appraiser may offer to settle. Review any offer carefully — you can accept or proceed to the formal hearing.

5

Present to the ARB

The Appraisal Review Board is independent of the CAD. Present your evidence clearly and concisely. Most hearings run 15–30 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.”

— Section 13, Declaration of Rights, Republic of Texas, 1836

Hamilton County ranchers have worked this land through droughts, commodity crashes, and every other challenge the Hill Country edge can produce. The founders of the Republic wrote that no property shall be taken without consent and just compensation — a principle the small landowner in Hamilton County can claim as fully as anyone in the state. When Hill Country demand inflates valuations beyond what ranching income supports, the protest system is the answer. Look up your value. File your protest. Your land is yours to defend.

How to Protest Your Taxes →
Find Another County →
Partner
Let a professional handle your Hamilton County protest.
Ownwell’s Texas experts file, negotiate, and fight on your behalf — from start to finish. You pay only if they save you money.

Get Your Free Estimate →

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.

Affiliate Disclosure: Some links on this site are affiliate links. We may earn a commission at no additional cost to you. We only link to services we believe may be genuinely useful to Texas property owners.

© 2026 Property-Taxes-Texas.com — A project of Carrie Hagglund