
Property Tax Resources · Dickens County, Texas
Caprock country with one of Texas’s highest effective rates — Dickens County’s rugged escarpment marks the edge of the Llano Estacado and the beginning of a heavy tax burden.
Sources: Population — U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2024 estimates; County Debt — Texas Bond Review Board (FY2025)
🔴 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.
Dickens County occupies a slice of the Texas Caprock, where the High Plains drop off toward the Rolling Plains and ranch land still dominates. The county seat of Dickens is one of the smallest county seats in Texas — the entire county has fewer than 1,800 residents — but the combined property tax rate is among the highest in the region relative to appraised values.
With a 2.48% effective rate on modest property values, Dickens County landowners pay a disproportionate share of income toward property taxes. Few protests are filed annually — if you own property here and have not protested recently, there’s a strong chance your taxable value is higher than it should be.
Official CAD site — appraisal notices, exemption applications, and district contact information.
Search your property record, view current appraised value, and verify exemption status.
Dickens County Appraisal District protest procedures, online filing portal, and deadline information for the current year.
Every taxing entity’s proposed rate, adopted rate, and public hearing schedule for Dickens County.
Enter the date your Notice of Appraised Value was mailed to find your exact filing deadline.

Every taxing unit in Dickens 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 Dickens County Tax Rates →| Taxing Entity | Type | Rate (2025 adopted) |
|---|---|---|
| Dickens County | County | $0.8500/$100 |
| Patton Springs ISD | School District | $0.7421/$100 |
| Spur ISD | School District | $0.9925/$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 — verify current rates at your county appraisal district.
What your Notice means and exactly what to do — and by when — after it arrives.
How the Texas homestead exemption lowers your taxable value, including recent changes.
When a property tax consultant is worth it for protesting your appraisal.
Lesser-known special valuations that can cut the taxable value of qualifying land.
The state office that oversees appraisal districts and protects taxpayers.
Who sets your county’s values and why that role matters to your bill.
Search your account at dickenscad.org. Know your Notice of Appraised Value and the deadline printed on it.
File online, by mail, or in person at Dickens County Appraisal District: P.O. Box 180, 509 Montgomery St., Dickens, TX 79229. Deadline: May 15, 2026 or 30 days after your notice was mailed.
Recent sales of comparable properties, your purchase price, photos of condition issues, and repair estimates all strengthen your case.
Before your ARB hearing, a CAD appraiser may offer to settle. Review any offer carefully before accepting — you can accept or proceed to the formal hearing.
The Appraisal Review Board is independent of the CAD. Present your evidence clearly and concisely. Most hearings run 15–30 minutes.
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, 1836Dickens County never had the numbers to resist much of anything. That’s what makes the founders’ principle matter most here: the protection of property rights isn’t just for the big counties and the well-funded. It was written for everyone — the rancher in Dickens, the farmer in Afton, the retiree in Spur. The Declaration of Rights that men signed at Washington-on-the-Brazos in March 1836 said it plainly: no property shall be taken without consent and just compensation. Look up your value. File your protest. Your voice counts here more than you think.