H.B. 3273
TITLE 1. PROPERTY TAX CODE
CHAPTER 41. LOCAL REVIEW
Texas Property Tax Code 2023 Edition: The Texas Property Tax Code available on this website are current through the 89th Regular Legislative Session, 2025. The constitutional provisions found on this website are current through the amendments approved by voters in November 2023.
An act relating to public notice of the availability on the Internet of property-tax-related information.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
SECTION 1. Section 25.19(m), Tax Code, as added by Chapter
209 (H.B. 2723), Acts of the 87th Legislature, Regular Session,
2021, is redesignated as Section 25.19(l-1), Tax Code, and amended
to read as follows:
(l-1) [(m)] A notice required by Subsection (a) or (g) must
include the notice required by Section 26.04(e-2).
SECTION 2. Section 26.04, Tax Code, is amended by amending
Subsections (e-2) and (e-4) and adding Subsection (e-6) to read as
follows:
(e-2) The chief appraiser of each appraisal district shall post
prominently on the appraisal district’s Internet website, if the
appraisal district maintains an Internet website, and the assessor
for each taxing unit that participates in the appraisal district
shall post prominently on the taxing unit’s Internet website
a notice informing each owner of
property located in the appraisal district that the estimated
amount of taxes to be imposed on the owner’s property by each taxing
unit in which the property is located may be found in the property
tax database maintained by the appraisal district under Section
26.17. The notice must include:
(1) the following statement in bold typeface: “Visit
Texas.gov/PropertyTaxes to find a link to your local property tax
database on which you can easily access information regarding your
property taxes, including information regarding the amount of taxes
that each entity that taxes your property will impose if the entity
adopts its proposed tax rate. Your local property tax database will
be updated regularly during August and September as local elected
officials propose and adopt the property tax rates that will
determine how much you pay in property taxes.”;
(2) a statement that the property owner may request
from the county assessor-collector for the county in which the
property is located or, if the county assessor-collector does not
assess taxes for the county, the person who assesses taxes for the
county under Section 6.24(b), contact information for the assessor
for each taxing unit in which the property is located, who must
provide the information described by this subsection to the owner
on request; [and]
(3) the name, address, and telephone number of the
county assessor-collector for the county in which the property is
located or, if the county assessor-collector does not assess taxes
for the county, the person who assesses taxes for the county under
Section 6.24(b); and
(4) instructions describing how a property owner may
register on the appraisal district’s Internet website, if the
appraisal district maintains an Internet website, to have
notifications regarding updates to the property tax database
delivered to the owner by e-mail.
(e-4) The comptroller:
(1) with the advice of the property tax administration
advisory board, shall adopt rules prescribing the form of the
notice required by Subsection (e-2); and
(2) may adopt rules regarding the format, posting, and
publication [delivery] of the notice.
(e-6) By August 7 or as soon thereafter as practicable, the
chief appraiser of each appraisal district shall publish in a
newspaper of general circulation in the county for which the
appraisal district is established the notice required by Subsection
(e-2). If there is no newspaper of general circulation in the
county for which the appraisal district is established, the notice
shall be posted at the appraisal office for the district.
SECTION 3. Section 26.05(d-1), Tax Code, is amended to read
as follows:
(d-1) The governing body of a taxing unit other than a
school district may not hold a public hearing on a proposed tax rate
or a public meeting to adopt a tax rate until the fifth day after the
date the chief appraiser of each appraisal district in which the
taxing unit participates has:
(1) posted [delivered] the notice required by Section
26.04(e-2) or published or posted the notice required by Section
26.04(e-6); and
(2) complied with Section 26.17(f).
SECTION 4. Section 26.17, Tax Code, is amended by adding
Subsection (g) to read as follows:
(g) The chief appraiser of each appraisal district that
maintains an Internet website shall deliver to a property owner by
e-mail notifications regarding updates to the property tax database
if the owner registers on the website to receive such notifications
in that manner.
SECTION 5. Section 41.46(a), Tax Code, is amended to read as
follows:
(a) The appraisal review board before which a protest
hearing is scheduled shall deliver written notice to the property
owner initiating a protest not later than the 15th day before the
date of the hearing. The notice must include:
(1) the date, time, and place of the hearing;
(2) a description of the subject matter of the hearing
that is sufficient to identify the specific action being protested,
such as:
(A) the determination of the appraised value of
the property owner’s property;
(B) the denial to the property owner in whole or
in part of a partial exemption; or
(C) the determination that the property owner’s
land does not qualify for appraisal as provided by Subchapter C, D,
E, or H, Chapter 23; [and]
(3) a statement that the property owner is entitled to
a postponement of the hearing as provided by Section 41.45 unless
the property owner waives in writing notice of the hearing; and
(4) the notice required by Section 26.04(e-2).
SECTION 6. The change in law made by this Act applies only
to a notice required to be delivered for an ad valorem tax year that
begins on or after the effective date of this Act.
SECTION 7. This Act takes effect January 1, 2024.
______________________________ ______________________________
President of the Senate Speaker of the House
I certify that H.B. No. 3273 was passed by the House on April
20, 2023, by the following vote: Yeas 110, Nays 36, 2 present, not
voting; and that the House concurred in Senate amendments to H.B.
No. 3273 on May 17, 2023, by the following vote: Yeas 142, Nays 0,
1 present, not voting.
______________________________
Chief Clerk of the House
I certify that H.B. No. 3273 was passed by the Senate, with
amendments, on May 12, 2023, by the following vote: Yeas 30, Nays
0.
______________________________
Secretary of the Senate
APPROVED: __________________
Date
__________________
Governor
