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Callahan County Appraisal District

Local Appraisal District

O’Connor is the leading company representative for the Callahan Central Appraisal District property owners because:

  • We believe O’Connor takes a more assertive approach to reducing property taxes at every level of the appeals process. All available appeal options are utilized, including informal meetings, ARB hearings, binding arbitration, SOAH proceedings, and coordination of judicial appeals.
  • Our understanding of what it takes to successfully lower property taxes is strengthened by our regular interactions with appraisal district personnel.
  • While strong relationships are important, credible evidence is critical. O’Connor uses proprietary software and databases with over 50 million sales records, designed in part to mirror the appraisal districts’ methods of evaluating evidence.
  • O’Connor has the experience and expertise necessary to gather and present appraisal and sales data in compliance with the standards set by the Callahan County Appraisal Review Board (ARB) and Appraisal District (CAD).

Callahan County Appraisal District

Local Appraisal District

Callahan Central Appraisal District’s (CAD) formal and informal 2024 hearing results are displayed below:

  • The total property tax savings in 2024 from formal hearings resulted in $300,000 for Callahan County. In 2024, property owners in Callahan County contested the taxable value of 340 accounts.
  • In Callahan County, less than 1% of informal property tax appeals and 96% of Appraisal Review Board (ARB) appeals were successful.
  • In Callahan County, commercial property tax savings from formal protests through the ARB resulted in a total of $240,000, while homeowners got $60,000 in 2024.
  • In 2024, 2% of parcels in Callahan County were protested.
Save With O’Connor

1,148

Average HCAD Tax Savings

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Average Property Tax Savings from Protesting (Informal + Formal)

View Savings

Residential Property

343

Commercial Property

1,966

Disclaimer: O’Connor is a property tax consultant and is not affiliated with any appraisal district. Data for graphs provided by Texas comptroller.

Single Family
Commercial / Other
Total

Disclaimer: O’Connor is a property tax consultant and is not affiliated with any appraisal district. Data for graphs provided by Texas comptroller.

Single Family
Commercial / Other
Total

2024 County Appraisal District Statistics

Select

Year

  • address County: Callahan
  • address Street Address: 132 W. 4th St. Baird, TX 79504-5314
  • address Mailing Address: 132 W. 4th St. Baird, TX 79504-5314
  • address Phone: 325-854-5865

Major Cities:

Anderson County Texas totals 8 square miles, with a 2020 population of about 7,076. Adjacent counties include Henderson, Houston, Freestone, Cherokee, and Leon County. The total market value of real property and personal property in Anderson County in 2020 was $4,900,000,000. Anderson County 2020 property taxes are estimated to total $58,600,000 million based on an effective tax rate of 2.4% including homestead exemptions. Anderson County property owners protested the noticed value for 214 houses and 1,100 commercial and BPP properties. Anderson County Appraisal Review Board appeals were successful for 17.05% of the owners. Property owner property tax protests in Anderson County results in savings of $16,062,679 million in 2020, or $12,355 per account protested. The 2020 budget for Anderson was $1,200,000 including 13 employees.

Callahan Property Tax Values

Callahan County

Average Callahan Property Tax Values

1,148

Average Texas Property Tax Values

1,148

Frequently Asked Questions

Submit a Notice of Protest before the deadline with supporting documentation explaining your reason.

You present your evidence to an appraiser or review board, who evaluates both sides before making a decision.

Comparable sales, property condition photos, and unequal appraisal data are commonly used to support claims.

Yes, consultants can manage filing, prepare evidence, and represent you during hearings.

Yes, property owners can file a protest annually if they believe their property is overvalued.