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Texas Property Tax 2026: The Summer Vote That Sets Your Bill

Protest season is over. Now Texas counties, cities, and school boards vote on the tax rate that sets your 2026 bill. Here's how to watch and weigh in.

If you were waiting to protest your appraisal, that window has closed for 2026 — the May 15 deadline is behind us. But the part of the year that actually decides what you pay is just beginning. Over the next several weeks, your county, your city, and your school district will each vote on a tax rate, and those votes — not your appraisal — set your bill.

Here’s exactly where the 2026 cycle stands, the relief already working in your favor, and how to show up for the decisions that are still on the table.

Where the 2026 cycle stands right now

Texas property taxes run on a yearly clock. Values are set as of January 1, notices go out in spring, and the protest deadline lands on or about May 15. That part is done. What’s happening now and next:

In other words: the appraisal fight is over for the year, but the tax-rate fight is wide open — and that’s the one most homeowners never watch.

The relief already working in your favor for 2026

Texas voters approved two homestead exemption increases in November 2025, and they apply to your 2026 taxes (and retroactively to 2025):

Together, that brings the combined homestead exemption for seniors and disabled homeowners to roughly $200,000 of school-taxable value. These came out of the 2025 legislative session as SB 4 and SB 23, with voters ratifying the constitutional amendments. (Texas Tribune)

What to do: pull up your most recent appraisal notice or your account on your county appraisal district’s site and confirm the homestead exemption is actually applied. The relief only reaches your bill if the exemption is on file — and if you’ve never claimed homestead on the home you live in, you can usually still file.

The vote that actually sets your bill

This is the piece the system makes easy to miss. After your taxing units get the certified values, each one calculates two rates that you should know by name (Texas Comptroller — tax rate calculation):

Here’s the trap to watch for: an official can announce that the tax rate is going down and still be raising your taxes — because rising values mean a lower rate can pull in more money. The honest yardstick is the no-new-revenue rate. If your city, county, or school district adopts a rate above no-new-revenue, that’s a tax increase, no matter what the headline rate does.

How to watch — and be heard

Truth-in-taxation exists to give you a window. Use it:

You don’t need a consultant or a lawyer to do this. Watch your local agendas, note when the rate hearing is, and ask one question: are you adopting above the no-new-revenue rate?

The bigger fight in Austin

The 2025 session (the 89th Legislature) didn’t stop at exemptions — it also tightened how appraisal review boards operate. (Bracewell — 89th Legislature tax update) And the politics are only heating up heading into 2027.

Translation for homeowners: more relief is likely on the way, but “eliminate property taxes” and “actually replace the revenue that funds your schools” are two very different conversations. Watch who proposes how the money gets replaced — that’s where the real cost lands.

What to do next

This article is general information about how the Texas property-tax system works, not legal or financial advice. For your specific property, confirm details with your county appraisal district and your local taxing units.

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