Tax Deferral for Homeowners
Texas law permits a homeowner who is 65 or older or a disabled person to defer payment of
current property taxes on the person's residence homestead until he or she no longer owns or
occupies the home as a residence. For purposes of this law, a person is considered disabled
if he or she is under a disability for purposes of payment of disability insurance benefits
under Federal Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance.
Property taxes continue to accrue during the deferral period, and are assessed interest
at the rate of 8% per year. Once an over-65 or disability deferral has been granted, additional
charges cannot be levied for delinquent penalty and interest.
The downside of a deferral is that rather than eliminating property taxes, it merely
postpones when the taxes must be paid.
Before applying for tax deferral, which is not the same thing as an over-65 or
disability homestead exemption, people need to understand that the taxes and
accrued interest must eventually be paid. The deferral ends when the person who applied to the deferral
ceases to occupy the home as the person's residence homestead. If the person who applied dies,
the deferral passes to the person's surviving spouse if the spouse is 55 or older, owns the residence, and
was living in it at the time of death. Once the deferral has ended, the person or spouse must pay all
accrued taxed, penalty, and interest within 180 days. On the 181st day, the entire amount becomes
delinquent and the taxing units may pursue foreclosure. Also, those who have an outstanding mortgage
should check with their mortgage company to make certain the deferral doesn't violate terms of the deed
of trust. If the home has a mortgage, the deed of trust may permit the mortgage company to foreclose if
all taxes aren't paid on time.
Eligible homeowners in Harris County may obtain a deferral by filing a deferral affidavit
with the Harris County Appraisal District. HCAD will then notify each affected
jurisdiction, such as the county, city, school district or other entity, that a
tax deferral has been granted. If a suit to collect delinquent taxes is already
pending on the property, the affidavit may be filed with the court in which the
suit is pending as well as with HCAD.
In addition to the over-65 and total disability deferrals, a limited form of deferral may be
available to homeowners whose appraised value increased by more than 5% from one tax year to the next,
excluding any improvements made to the home. Under this provision,
taxes must be paid before delinquency on any increase in value up to 5%. Taxes
on the remaining amount of increase may then be deferred on terms similar to
those for the over-65 or total disability deferral.
Before using the appraisal increase deferral, homeowners should first contact the tax offices for the
jurisdictions in which their property is located to determine how much tax can
legally be deferred. Application for this deferral should be made no later than
January 31 on a special affidavit form available from HCAD. Homeowners
interested in this type of tax deferral should check with their mortgage company
to ensure that a deferral won't violate the terms of their deed of trust.
Over-65 and disabled homeowners should also ensure that they have applied for and received
applicable homestead exemptions for over-65 and disabled homeowners. These
exemptions can substantially reduce tax liability.
The Over-65 or Disabled Tax Deferral Affidavit form can be found by clicking here
33-06.pdf or fillable form here
33-06_fill.pdf
The Tax Deferral Affidavit for Appreciating Residence Homestead Value form can be found by
clicking here 33-065.pdf
or fillable form here
33-065_fill.pdf
For any questions or additional assistance, you are encouraged to call an HCAD
representative at the numbers and location listed on the
contact page.
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